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- CLARESH 


VOLUME 10 


/ / 
fA } \ 
t \ 


il 


OLM 


GLARESHOLM ALTA., SEPT. 245914, 


REVIEW 


SUMMARY OF WAR SITUATION 


Claresholm and District | 


Petrogtad, Sept. 23.—The Russian general staff has! Mr. A. E. Hunter went to Macleod 
issued the following about the battle at the Aisne River. 

“In continuing the pursuit of the retreating Austrians 
the Russian troops have reached Veschloky. 

In the region of Przemysl the operations of the Russians) 


are developing with success. 


Upon the German front the Russian troops are in close 
contact with the enemy, but no battle has yet taken place, 
Rome, via Paris, Sept. 22—In spite of denials to the con-, 


trary made by the Austrian 


publish detailed descriptions purporting to show that Austrian , Stavely were in town yesterdiy. 


government, newspapers here ! 


armaments are being placed on the Italian frontier, and de-; 


clare that preparations are being made by Austria to invade last week in Calgary on business. 


Italy. 


Montreal, Sept. 23.—The Belgian commission to the was a visiter at Review Oflice this 
United States arrived in Montreal to-night. 


The delegation 


was greeted in the streets by several thousand citizens. They 


will 
morning. 


London, Sept. 23.—According to a message from Paris, 
to the Central News, a Russian cruiser has sunk a German jg visiting with his brother “Rim” 
cruiser and two torpedo boats in the Baltic. 


probably leave for Chicago Thursday night or Friday itor with Mr. and Mrs, J. R. Watt 


Ottawa, Sept. 23.—It is understood that the government | 


will shortly pass an order-in-council which will give the feder= fycurance Co. Lethbridge was 
al authorities a greater measure of control over telegraph and town yesterday. 


telephone lines during the war. 


will take wide powers, which will be exercised only when it 
If action is taken it is likely that the 


becomes necessary. 


The government it is stated 


pug of the board of censors appointed shortly wiil be 


enlarge 


ill the wives of all military and naval reservists of allied | 
British or otherwise, whether in need or not, who have not 
communicated with the Gol, Macleod chapter 1.0.D.E. kindly | 


do so at once, either in person 


or in writing? By doing sc} 


IDA S. DANKS, 


eel wilt greatly facilitate matters. | 
Sed. 


Game Regulations 
A book regarding the Game Act 
was received at this office to-day and 


it shows the following regarding the | 


regulations jor Mis. 
Mountain sheep and goats 
From Sept. Ist to Oct. 
Deer, moose and Caribou 
From Noy, Ist to Dee. 
Ducks and swan 
From Sept. Ist to Dec. 
Cranes, rails, coots, snipes, ete. 
From Sept. Ist to Dee. 
Prairie chickens, partridge, ete. 
From Cet, Ist to Nov. 


Fox: mink, fisher and martin 
From Nov, Ist to Mar. 


Otters and musk:ats 
From Nov. Ist to April 30 
No Ducks, Swan, Snipes, Ete. to be 
placed in cold storage between Mar, 
1st and Sept. 20th following; 
No person shall export any animal 


81 


81 


80 


31 


65,000 Chocolite Bars Going te 
Valeartie: 
Toronto, Sept. 2%—William Neil- 


14} s0n Limited, Toronto, offered to sup | 


14} of chocolate, for use in whatever man- 


or bird mentioned in the Game Act 
without a permit from the Minister 
of Agriculture. 

No person shall willfully disturb, 
destroy or take the eggs of any game 
cv other birds protected by The 
Game Act. 

No dogs shall be used by any one 
to hunt big game. 


Province of Alberta To Wit By 
virtue of a writ of Execution issued 
out of the District Court of Macleod, 
Alberta at the suit of THE BANK 
OF HAMILTON Plaintiff and BEN- 
AJAH J, MILLER Defendant and 
to me directed against the lands of 
BENAJAH J. MILLER T have 
seized and taken into: Execution the 
following lands namely: The North 
West Quarter of Section Nine (9), 


Township Fourteen (14), Range 
Twenty-Kight (28), West of the 
Fourth (4th) Neridian, in the Pro- 


vince of Alberta, except all mines 
and minerals, which L[ shall expose 
for sale on Saturday the Twenty 
Fourth (24th) day of October 1914 in 
front of the post office at Stavely, 
Alberta at the hour of Two o'clock in 
the afternoon. 
Sherill’s oflice July 20, 1914. 
A. B. MacDonald, Sheriff 
Macleod Judical District. 


For Sale Cheap 


N. E. quarter of section 14, Town-| 
ship 13, Range 26, West of 4th Mir- | 
idian. Inquire ot M. E. Dillan, Ash- | 
land, Wis. 31-388 


| 


Secretary. 


Gift 


ply the Government with 65,000 bars 


ner the Government should choose. 

This offer has been gratefully | 
accepted by the Minister of Militia, 
Colonel Sam Hughes, and the choco- 
late is to be shipped to Valeartiér, 
and from there: will be transhipped 
with the Canadian Commissariat to 
Europe. 

The several hundred members of 
the staff of William Neilson Limited 
have also donated one full day’s pay 
to the Canadian Red Cross Fund. 


British Ship Sunk 


22 Lives are Lost’ 


—— 


H 
Trebizond, Asia Minor, Sept. 22, | 
Twenty-two persons lost their lives by | 
drowning. as the result of the sinking | 
of the British steamer Belgian King, | 
near Cape Kureli, yesterday. The 

Belgian King carried passengers aud 

crew to the number of 120; 98 of| 
them were saved by a Russivn steam- | 
It is surmised this accident was | 
due to a imine, but the real cause has 

not been revealed, 


Thousand Horses A Week 


Halifax, N. S., Sept. 22—About. 
1,000 horses will be shipped from Hal- 
ifax every week this winter to the Bri- 
tish army, Halifax has been chosen 
as the depot for Britis army re 
mounts, and arrangements are being 
made with the exibition commission 
whereby 2,000 horses will be housed 


er, 


| 


in the exibition grounds throughout 
the winter. 


Horrors of War 


What is 


know 


the Few 
or understand, 
“The Nations of Europe” 
citises wud issues of the greatest of 
all wars magnisciently illustrated, 
Everybody wants to know why indus- 
try, finance shipping 
nails every activity all over the world, 
has been instantly stopped. Agents 
send 15e, cost mailing outtit. Retails 
$1.50, 

Hom Publishing House, 
Box 4, St. Joho, F. 


about? 
Our 


war 
book 


vives the 


commerce, 


B. 


away on a hunting trip this week. 


this week, 


jadvantage of the cut prices, 


last night on a business trip. 


Dr, Wilson the Vet from Carmangay 
1s in town on business to-doy. 


J. F. Reynolds and family motored 
to Macleod yesterday evening. 


H. O. Haslam and T. Kingsley are 


Mr. ard Mrs. ‘Rance’ Miller of 


W. G. Moffatt spent Saturday of 


Mr. A, S. Ward, of Winnipeg 


week, 


Miss M. Hilyar of Calgary isa vis: 


this week, 


“Shorty’ 


Hardwick of Gleichen 


Mr. Irwin the manager of The Sun 
in 


The Fire brigade had a 
on Tuesday evening and 
work was done, 


work out 
fast 


some 


Many in town who own chickens 
We having their hen houses fixed up 


for the winter months, 


Mr. A. Ellison inspector for the 
Oecidental Ensurance, Co. of Wawa- 


——S 


is in town to-day. 


Nesile 
Mr, und Mrs. Reinecke, Miss Shand 
d Dr. Learn motored to Lethbride 


wud bad a very enjoyable trip. 

On Friday 25th a representative 
Wothe Remount Gomntission wii be 
vn town to buy borses for the war. 


Mr. aud Mrs, Colley and Mr. and 
Mis. Redfern motored to Lethbridge 
on Suuduay and returned on Monday. 


W.oat. Snanks soid a dozen ot bis 
white Wyandottes to Dr. Learn, The 
coin turned the right way for Shanks. 


Directum [T and William 8 two 2 
minute pacers will race to-day in 
Columbus, Ohio for a purse of $6,000. 


Mr. and Mrs, Paulson went to 
Minneapolis the first of the week. 
Mrs. Paulson's sister is very sick 
there. 


Mrs. Braren, Mrs, Gerioux, Miss 
Williams and Miss Braren motored 
to Parkland Tuesday afternoon on a 
calling trip. 

E. Jones went to Calgary this 
morning fora couple of days. He 
expects to get some special films for 
the Rex Theatre. ; 


D. B. Vanhorn who has been down 
in the Cardston district this week 
has purchased several hundred head 
of horses and cattle. 


Mr. S. Baxter who-has been working 
for the Alberta Telephone Co. at 
Cardston since June is spending a 
few days in town this week. 

Carl J. Braren’s big slaughter sale 
is still on and will be over next Wed 
nesday, Come in this week and take 


{ 
| 


Bert Smith the local horse trainer, 


shipped “Black Jack” along with 
“Senator Warner’) to Vernon B.C, 
tu take part in the races there, | 


Mr. G.Friend the telephone man wiis | 
outin the hitls ou Tues. and shot an 
American eagle. Che bird measured 2 
ft. Sin, from bill to tail and 6ft. 7 in, 


across the wings | 


are 


The Rex Theatre have some new 
records for the piano come and hear 
them. 


Mrs. Mason of Navton is visiting 
With her parents Mr. and Mrs. W. R. 
Lindsay. 


Dr. Learn of Banff has been renew- 
ing acquaintances in towu this week 


,as Well as making his visit a business 


trip. Dr. sold the old Johnson drug 
store to Geo. Ringrose who will use 
it for an undertaking parlor. | 

The Rex Theatre have changed 
their film exchange this week and 
how showing Universal films. 


Travellers who have seen the Univer- 
sal films say they are the very best. | 
Come and see the new pictures, | 


The Mud Lake Oil well was officia- 
lly opened — yesterday afternoon. | 
Mayor Stebbins, Mr. Bryan the 
managing director and others gave 
brief addresses, Claresholim, Stavely 


The drilling will start at once. | 


all 
the! 


wanted in 
small 


Men and 
localities no matter how 


wollen 


work a few hours in their spare time 


will pay $15.00 
simples | 


neighbors, position 
weekly, sample case with 
will be furnished free, | 
The Consumers Association. | 
Windsor, Ontario. 


The Police Gout 


These two weeks which have just 
passed, the police court have tried | 
some where fn the neighborhood of) 
twenty four cases, The juvenile case 
was the lengthiest. Thechildren were 
up on two trials; one for breaking in 
a store und the other for tuking grain 
trom the Van vauver Bievatior 
They are now on suspended sentence 
until November Ist. 


Lu. | 


The Granum Case 


Constable Bateman 
Andersen, und two Chinamen, Hop 
Sing and Lung Jack at Granum Sun- | 
day night. They were brought up| 


arrested P. | 


before Inspector Tucker on Tuesday ' 


A Hundred Isles Wait 
Washed by the seven seis, 
A hundred isles wait- 


The gods who on their knees, 
Hold sealed their destined fate, 


Conscious of rectitude, 
Tn honors lawful cause; 


Serene their attitude, 


Nor fear of shame their pause. 
Spirit of Freedom's right, 

‘Gainst despotism’s gloom; 
Breaks forth at last ‘the light’ 

That speaks the despot’s doom, 


World's greatest empire known 
By her republic stands; 
Mothers of men 'tis shown, 
‘Tnion’ and ‘Stars’ join hands. 
Anglo-American, 
Ceutur’ Fraternity: 
One hundred years the Span 
Of peace, from Sea to Sea. 
Voice of Democracy, 
*Perial Britain Greets 
Dark veiled Autocracy 
Darker *Varhalla’ meets. 


aud Granum were all represented. | Pole, Rus, and Gallic move- 


Britania’s sons beside, 
Belgium's fair name to prove, 
For ever Glorified, 


village may be who are willing to Washed by the seven sens, 


One hundre.t isles wait 


showing sample to their friends and) The gods who on their knees, 


Hold sealed their destined fate 


Preserving Fruit Without Sugar 
(By a Local Resident) 

This isa very simple way to pre 
serve fruit) andin the Old Country 
nearly all the fruit is put up without 
sugar with the exceptian of jams and 


ly free from specks or bruises, and 


asif for sugar preserving. After the 
fruit is stalked it shold be placed into 
bottles with a lar > mouth until filled 
the fruit should then be covered with 
clean cold) waterand stood in the 
kettle or boiler in about three or four 
inches of cold water, this kettle is 
then placed on the stove and the bot- 
tles covered with small plates or glass 
tops not fastened down, after this 's 
done put the lid on the kettle ard 
bring to the boil and keep boiling fer 
twenty minutes. Take the kettle 
from the stove and stand in a coo! 
place until the fruit is entirely cold, 


morning. Hop Sing pointed a revol- | 
ver at Anderson, Anderson struck 
him and both laid complaint to the 
police. Hop Sing was fined $20. and 
costs. 


Union Bank at Valcartier 


The Union Bank of Canada who 
opened a Branch at Valeartier Mi i- 
tary Camp three weeks ago and who 


do not remove the fruit from the 
boiler until it is cold, then place in 
‘the bottles large corks and cover 
these with hot sealing wax. Fruit 
| done in this manner will keep almost 
any length of time, of course sealers 
, can be used instead of the bottles bit 
great care must be taken in sealing 
the fruit up as it must be entirely 
| airtight. 


have been transferring remittances to 
and from this Branch and any of 
their other Offices without exchange 
have vow moved into a permanent 
building located next to the Staff 
Quarters. 


Here's a Good One 


“What's the use giving us staff as 
stale as that and calling it news?” de- 
minded old Mrs. Foozle, looking up 
from her paper. 

“Perhaps it was delayed in trans. 
mission, my dear,” said Mr, 
looking up from his paper. 

“Delayed? Well, T should say so. 
Here it tells about the supposed sink- 


Foozle, 


ling of a cruiser, aud its dated Van- 


Moffatt Bros, of Champion uarrow 
ly esenped having a big fire in their, 
hardware store, The fire caught in| 
the oil room but was put out before | 


any damage was done, | 


A letter was received from one of} 


)the boys at camp this week und he 


suid that sixty horses of the Remounts | 
were drowned while crossing the 


Jacques Cartier River. | 


The Carmangay Agi icultural Soci 
exhibition 
Carman- 


ety ure holding its annual 
September 29 and 80, 


The 
guy people expect carloads of Clares- 
holin citizens to visit their fair, 


The Claresholm Cadets are drilling 
every Tuesday and Thursday after | 
four under the principal Mr, Ford. | 

Twenty extra pupils have joined the! 
‘Cadets and are getting along quickly. 


couver, B. C., 
world what 
back in those day?” 


New York Telegraph, 


Now, who in the 


cures 


~~ NOTICE 


Large tract of good valley farming 
land just thrown open for free settle 
ment in Orevou. Over 200,000 acres 
inall, Good climate, rich soil, 
does not 
finest crops of grain fruit and garden 
truck. Por large taap full instructions 


require irrigation to raise 


and information, anda plat of sever- 


al sections of exceptionally good 
claims, send 3340 to John Keefe, 
Oregon City, Oregou. Three years 
aU.S. surveyor and timberman, An 


Opportunity to get a good fertile free 
homestead near town and market, 


happened away | 


NATIONAL 
| W. L. Pet 
Boston ..... aaoondonone EMG pt 
New York........0000 . 76 68 657 
St. Louis .......00% . 75 a 
;Chicago .....e.ee. coos U4 5 
| Philadelphia.........6. 68 
| Brooklyn vc. ..e cee eee 67 
Pittsburg......... “i 62 
Cincinnati.......+s.. +e 578 

AMERICAN 

W. L. Pet. 
Philadelphia........... 91 49 650 
BOstGH <3 cncarisaaiices 85 54 ON: 
Dstrolbueststeelttiuiac i 75 68 
Washington . 73 67 bzl 
GQUIGNBON s ccisit conse 67 7H A72 
Re ETT. Banannninnantn 64 77 Add 
ye Be} Phaarnarecionnrar 63 77 160 
Clevelund.....sccsecees 45 98 BID 
| FEDERAL 
i W, L. Pet. 
Indianapolis ...eee..66. 78 GL 56L 
AIGA et atstia sl eaten t 7s 62 J 
| Baltimore ...... Antsy 73 63 
|W el Aoenanaannsnians 71 64 
Brooklyti oe ee eee eee es TO 66 
Kansns City .........6- 6275 dbz 
Bbrlsouigionarsctun ass aiete HO TS ABS 
IE) anaarannranna M7 ALS 
INTERNATIONAL 
W, L, Pet 

Providence, .......00088 92 50 609 
Rochester.......eeeeee. SH GL HM 
My lOmate sania cts sate 87 60 AZ 
OOD OMe pasa iacaan + 7268 54 
Baltimore ....... teatee TONS .600 
SA aT Aainiainincnininionan 70 76 AT9 
Montreal .....+eeeesee6 BI TR AOA 
Jersey City. ceceecee ees 46 104 307 


THE LAND OF OPHIR. 


Territory Now Derelict Where Solo- 


| towns — Sofala, 


* mon Got His Gold. 

The coast of southeastern Africa ia 
not usually regarded to-day as a re- 
Bion of any especial interest. It 
mainly belongs to the vast undevelop- 
ed territory of Portuguese Hast Af- 
rica, The interior is wild and thinly 
inhabited, nor, apart from their poli- 
tical position and their rather trifl- 
ing commercial importance, are the 
Mozambique, and 
their fellows — especially inviting 
places, 

Nevertheless, there is much that ia 
of great, perhaps supreme interest in 
this more or less derelict territory, 
It is certain that it has been in the 


. past of great commercial {mportance, 


This is by no means an unparalleled 
phenomenon in history, The decayed 
town of Novgorod, in Russia, was 
once the emporium of northeast Eu- 
rope; the awful desert of Mekran in 
Beluchistan has been a great trade 
highway. 

There is ample evidence that the 


| region behind Sofala, part of which 


is now known as Mashonaland, was 
anciently of vast importance owing 
to its gold mines, It contains a re- 
markable series of ruins, mostly, as 


| is plain from the evidence afforded 


| 
| 


jellies. Fruit for preserving should be | 
of the best quality obtainable, entire: | 


should be prepared in the same way | 


by them, those of gold mining cen- 
ters, One of these deserted settle- 
ments is tolerably well known under 
the name of “Zimbabwe,” but it ia 
only one of many, 

Concerning the people who built 
these settlements.and exploited the 
mineral resources of this still aurifer- 
ous region there has been much con- 
troversy. So much seems certain that 
they were not an artistic race, This 
at once rules out the Egyptians. The 
almost entire lack of artistic objects 
and their very poor character might 
seem to point to Phoenicians, but 
since the Cretan discoveries the 
Phoenicians are being relegated to 
a lower place in history than they 
have hitherto occupied, and purely 
Phoenician enterprise in southeast 
Africa is highly improbable. 

The indications rather point to 
Arabia, The commercial importance 
of Arabia before the Mahommedan 
era is certain, The Sabaeans of Ye- 
men might very well have explored 
the eastern coast of Africa. The dis- 
tance from Aden to Delagoa Bay is 
some 2,600 miles less than that from 
Tyre to the Scillies, and there is real- 
ly no solid reason against the prob- 
ability of the accomplishment of such 
a voyige by Alab seomen; it was 
merely a matter of lengthy coasting. 
The gold fields would furnish an ir- 
resistible argument for systematic 
settlement, 

It is indeed possible that the coun- 
try is the land of Ophir wherefrom 
Solomon obtained his gold. We know 
that the treasure ships sailed from 
Eziongebir on the Red Sea; we know 
also that Solomon had relations with 
the Sabaeans. The voyage was a long 
one; the ships are said to have come 
once in three years. This obviously 
points to a distant country, not to 
one comparatively near at hand, such 
as Somaliland, 

The geographers of the Roman 
Empire were perfectly aware of the 
commercial importance of southeast 
Africa, Ptolemy names several towns, 
One he places, of course vaguely, at 
16 degrees 25 minutes south, and 
calls it Prasium. The situation cor- 
responds approximately with that of 
Kilimane at the mouth of the Zam- 


besi. Other trading stations are 
known. Gold, however, is not men- 
tioned. ‘There is reason to believe 


that the settlements were then de- 
serted, All show unmistakable traced 
of having been destroyed by fire, and 
presumably some eruption of savag- 


‘ ery from the interior éverthrew then. 


They were rediscovered about A. D. 
1000 by the people of Mogadoxo, and 
again became immensely tmportant, 
but if they did indeed furnish Solo- 
mon with his treasure their older 
glory will probably always outshine 
that of later days, at 


Weak In French, 

Miss Ellis, the teacher of French, 
looked at Bertie in surprise, and said: 

“Im surprised that your French is 
so weak, Bertie. Now, think for a 
moment, ‘Chapleau.’ What is that?" 

Bertie remained silent, apparently 
lost in deep thought, but to no pur- 
pose, ; 

“Well,” said the teacher impatient- 
ly, “what does your father throw up 
when he’s merry?” 

Bertie brightened, 

“His job, ma'am,” he replied, 


The Clock Was Wrecked, 
Biway——-Use an alarm clock nowa- 
days? 


Jigsup—No, never tried one but 
once, 

Biway—How was that? 

Jigsup—-Well, you see the first 


time it went off I didn’t exactly know 
what it was and so [ said, “Oh, tor 
heaven’s sake, Maria, shut up!” 
Maria happened to be awake and— 
well, that is how it was. 


Melancholy Milk. 
“Haven't you any milk that is 
more cheerful than this?” queried 


the new boarder as he poured some 
of the liquid into his coffee, 


“Why, what do you mean by 
that?" queried the landlady. 

“Oh, nothing,” rejoined the new 
boarder, ‘only this milk seems to 


the blues.” 
Getting Off Easy. 

“Very well,"’ she said, “if you are 
afraid to ask father for me we will 
consider our engagement at an end.” 


have 


N spite of the European war we 
have the advance millinery styles 
direct from Paris, and here ure 
some of the very nifttest of them. 

Ithough American designers are 

active and assert-that they can give 

American women just as good styles 

as the Paris houses, or better, still there 

are a few women who will insist upon 

Paris modes, ‘These women must not 

feel aggrieved if they are furnished 

with Paris fashions that never were 
born In Parts, 

There will ‘be many 
to cater to woman's Innate love for for- 
righ importations, and many little Pa- 
fan labels will be sewed into the 


attempts made | 


eco 
° 
° 
° 
° 
3° 


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COCKKOOCOCOCOCONCNOOOOOOOCCOO0 


Latest Parisian : 


fo oKod TTT ToT oKod -LoketoLolsTolololok ed oXoLolole) 


THE REVIEW, CLARESHOLM, ALTA. 


©O©CC00DOOO0OOCOO00CO000N000000 


: Importations § 


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In the eurly models unless the Geor- 
| Bette sailor at the upper left hand cor- 
ner of the illustration is u slight indi- 
j cation. > 

Each season Georgette brings out a 
|new sallor model which {mmediately 
;becomes the fashion. ‘This year the 
|Georgette sailor !s soft of crown and 


erowns of hats made in New York. If} curved of brim and has a white coque 


the women do not know the difference 
e American designer will have proved 
hiis point to his own satisfaction at any 
rate, 
However, 


here are some bona fide 
Varisian ha imported hefore the un- 
fortunate royal assassination which 
precipitated what may prove to be the 
most horrible war of history, For chic 
wnd style these hats have riot been su 
passed in many seasons, 


Three things have been detided about | 


the antumn hat—Iit will be small, smart 
aud pertly balanced upon the head, 
Large hats may make their appearance 
later, but there is no Indication of them 


All About the Navajo Blanket 


Qk Navajos belong to the Athabas- |] buquerque years ago # squaw 


pompon posed front and rear. 
The day of the blocked felt 
| passed—that Is, it is passed so fur as 
‘the fashionably gowned woman Is con- 
feerned. Undoubtedly the shops will 
| show blocked felt hats, but they will be 
| bought by women for general utility 
/purposes. The fashionable hut will be 
lof velvet combined with soft felt, vel- 
;Vet combined with taffeta, velvet trim- 
!med with flowers and feathers. 
The next mode! in the illustration is 
;built of the fashionable velvet over a 
buckram frame wired {nto ahape. 
Burnt ostrich feathers furnish the 
unique trimming, combined with «a 


was 


can family, which originaliy came} given a copy of the message of con- 


trom Alaska and has always produced |gratulation the Commercial 
these | sired to extend 


Indian weavers, Originally 


weavers were restricted In the choice | wove 


of thelr material to barks and the 
woody fibers of trees and plants, but 
the Spaniards who invaded the south- 
west following the conquistadors 
brought sheep with them and inade it 
ye ble for the Indians to find a splen- 
did substitute for thetr native cotton 
aud the woody substance of the varlous 
forms of cacti, 

About the only modern Implements 
that are employed In weaving are the 
hand cards, wire toothed combs for the 
woo! and shears with which to make 
cuttings, The frames are inade of rude 
poles, with the beams held in piace by 


rawhide ropes. 
The Indian puts his frames on up- 
rights, usually staked and lashed to 


trees in front of his hogan, or house, 
The women do the weaving squatted 
upon the ground, with legs folded un- 
der them, ‘They are close enough to 
reach to either side or halfway up. 
When the work has progressed to a 
height where it {s uncormfortable for 
them to reach they tilt the loom go 
that they may continue tn thetr original 
position, 
« hundred 
through 


years ago, a stick thrust 


ter grades, 

Most of the "genulne Nayajo” blan- 
kels that find their way to market are 
graded as half fancy. They are made 
trom high grade wools, but the dye 
uged is aniline and not the vegetable 
kind which marks the genuine blankets, 
‘These aniline dyed blankets preserva 
tmiost of the old patterns and sunbursts 
of colors, but the weaves are not as 
durable, The best blankets are made 
of fine native wool spun to a@ tension 
that makes them almost as durable as 
steel, with dyes that last always. The 
coarser grades of blankets have but 
few flecks of colors, belng usually 
white gray or brown, 

The Navajos have long had a high 
reputation as experts in (he use of dyes. 
In the old days they had a native blue, 
but nowadays indigo is often substl- 
tuted, Their blacks are made from 
roasted ocher mixed with gum from the 
small pine and later joined to an in- 
fusion of sumac leaves and twigs. A 
red dye is formed from barks and roots 
of sumac, mixed with black alder bark 
and juniper ashes. The yellow dye is 
made from the boiled tops of a fower- 
tne weed reduced with native alum. 

The bright red of their blankets Is 
often produced by 
bayeta or baize cloth, which England 
has made for years especially for the 
Spanish trade. The cloth has a long 
nap, Few blankets have regularly 
woven borders, these being looked upon 
as inartistic. In addition the Indians 
aistike having to weave the ends before 
they are reached, 

An imagery that fs remarkable is 
displayed by the Navajo women in 
their designs, This imagery is largely 
confined to the color schemes, as near- 
ly everything done is a copy of some- 
thing that the weavers have seen. The 
moon, stara und rainbows are familiar 
abjects they most often’ reproduce, 


interweavings of, 


club de- 
to him, and this she 
in well formed lnglish letters 
into a panel in a Navajo blanket that 


| Was presented to him, 


of 


these 


| The zigzags characteristic 
Indian blankets ure not intended to 
represent Hghtning. They are simply 


The spindle in use Is that of | 


the center of a wooden disk. | 
‘The work is exceedingly slow, an inch | 
or iwo being a day's work on the bet- | 


| 
| 


i NEW centerpieces of embroidered linen come tn odd shapes as a variation 
+ rt ; 

This hand embroidered centespiece is in the 
tricorne shape, the pattern being acceituated by the placing of the flowers, 


| 


| 


' 


the squaw's idea of beauty. The lox 
enge effects are the high spots in N: 
ajo art, and into the making of these 
some broad and sometimes alarming 
combinations and splashes of color are 
thrown, 

The more [maginallve of them weave 
into their color effects rude represen- 
tations of bows and arrows and house- 


hat {es} 


| 


‘band of motre ribbon with a little flat 
|bow in front, ‘The amateur milliner 
‘could easily build one of these simple 
jhats at very Httle expense, although fn 
ithe shops it commands a good round 
| price. - 


|MAKE SNAPSHOTS OF YOURSELF. 
;[)'D you ever seriously think that you 


would give a good deal for the gift | 


ito see yourself as others see you? It 
iia almost impossible to criticise your- 
| self with an open mind, simply because 
;you have a very one sided opinion of 
| yourself, so when you are studying the 
(problem of dressing yourself, arrang- 
‘ing your halr, holding yourself upright, 
‘improving your figure and all the other 
personal things that the woman who 
makes a «ood appearance 
studies you are working at a disad- 
vantage. It !s impossible for you to 
get a good, all round view of yourself. 

You may stand by the hour In front 
,of your mirror—if you have time—and 
yet you will see only certain sides of 
your many sided self, 


Snapshots, if you fortunate 


are 


jenough to have many of them, of your- | 


usually | 


The jaunty little hat illustrated next | 
at the bottom right hand side !s trim- 
med with coque feathers laid flat upon 
the crown, while the upstanding burnt 
ostrich feather gives to the tiny model 
much dignity. 


EEEEESEEE EEE EEE SEE EE Et 
Important Part of fF. 
CToflet | 


EEEEPEEEEEDELEEEEE EEE Hel 


MPHE whole subject of the rightful) 
care of the foot Is a large one, but; 
it ts only within the scope of this ar- | 
ticle to speak of the rightful care of} 
| the toe nall, a theme not unworthy of 
atudy. | 
| The nail of the great toe should be; 


broad, flat and smooth, even as the nail} 
jot the thumb, It should not be too fiat | 
;upen the flesh, nor should it be too 
}curved, for this latter condition tends 
to become exaggerated, so that the 
ends of the curve press deeper atd 
deeper into the flesh, 

A slight “half moon” should be 


vis- 


hold implements, stalk’s of corn and thej| self form the best means of studying | ible, and it should be worn long enough 


like. 
reproduce trains, locomotives and sim 
ilar objects. 


on the old circular style, 


mon practice for the weavers first to 


draw their designs in sand, but they 
depend nowadays upon inspiration, 
The Navajo artist uses no curves, In 


the ancient days every cross, zigzag or 
square was the embodiment of some 
prayer to the evil gods, the Navajo idea 
being that the good gods need not be 
supplicated, Being good, they wil! at- 
tend to their duties, 

In Navajo symbolic dialect eae) 
has a significance, white signif 
east, blue the south, yellow (the 


eolor 
< the 


When Vresident Roosevelt was at Al- /aad black the north 


On some of their blankets they | 


west! 


your defects and correcting them 


u who thought you held your 


| Yo 


Odd Shaped Centerpiece 


' 
the slouching carriage that modern 


clothes require--aren't fyou surprised 
when you see yourself silhouetied ina 
,Snapshot against a broad expanse of 
‘sky? 


UNUSUAL NOTE PAPER. 
For the wornan who seeks the un- 
| usual in note paper there is the 
‘double sheet with an Inch wide fap 
turning back from the second sheet 
over the first, from top to bottem, 

On this fap ia an initial an Inch and 
‘@ balf high aud much elongated 


to show a slight rim of white ubove the 
| pink, and the cuticle at !ts base should 


Formerly it was a com- | figure go erect, with but due regard for!/not be dry and harah, but soft, free of 


hangnails and rounding in an unbroken 
curve from one end to the other, ! 

Surely none of these are at all dim. 
cult to accomplish, A little care oncea 
week with a pair of curved nail acls | 
sors, a& pair of cutlele aclssors, a file, ! 
An emery board, an orange wood atick, | 
with a little bit of cotton to be used | 
under the nail edge, and the work Is 
easily done. e 

See that the shoes are ainply long if 
you wish to avoid bunions, which can 
make one as wretched as the toothache 
and bring raore wrinkles to the face in 


a day than your masseuse can work 
out in a week, 
} A tiny bit of pumice will sometimes 


| be found-useful In grinding down hard- 
fened, calloused cuticle. Care should be 
taken not to roughen or Injure the 


| tlele under the nall, but all dust st 

be removed by using a litle damp ¢ 
fon Wound about the orange woos 
| stlok 

|} ‘The toe nalis should be cut a little 
}@juare rather than round, the nail of 
the large toe cut rather shorter in the 
middle than at tha sides, A little 
bleaching solution a little healing 


cream, a |ittle polishing powder, snd, 


presto, the nails whi Appeared ¢ 
and unlovely look perfeetiv pink and 
shining and will repay thelr owner for 


| the time spent on then. 

} Such nats will not wear holes in alik 
| stockings as rough, uncars fur neils 
often do 


| INITIAL YOUR HANDKERCHIEFS, 

|})° you mark your own handker- 

| ehiefs® If you have the time it is| 
a wise and dainty thing to do, but why; 
not vary the monotony of white in-| 
itlaling? Indeed, tf you wish to be 
really smart you will do so, for the 
(handkerchtefs used by the 
jionables, at least in the mornings and 

afternoons, are embroidered or initialed , 
jin color, Usually the initial matehes a 


color in the frock or the hat or some! 


‘other accessory if the principal part of 
the costume Ie white. It is well to have 
several handkerchiefs embroidered in 
green, It being a neutral color, xo that 
they can be carried with those frocks 
for which you have no matching 
Frequently white handkerchiefs have 
| border hems in coler and an initial or 
monogram of the hem color, It is 4 
|pretty custom to embroider about the 


monogram or initial a little wreeth or, 


medallion frame. 


| taste 


j ed, 


ultra fash- | 


eolor, | 


The hat at the top center js a stun- 
ning model which bids falr to be one 
of the season's favorites, White satin 
is combined with black velvet, the satin 
‘and velvet arranged in saw tooth fash- 
lion upon the crown. A batwing of 


JX &@ cream or a white bedroom most 

women have the idea that nothing 
but white, pink or blue covers will do 
for the dresser, chiffonier and bed. 
This ia u mistake. ‘To have the bed- 
room covers in white when the room 
itself is enameled in white {s to make 
the room characterless, whereas to 
put a color into it at once gives it a 
personality, 

A decorator noted for his artistic 
insists that many of the white 
enameled rooms which he plans shall 
have covers of ecru or desp cream. 
Deep cream is preferable. The con- 
trast of this rich tone against the white 
ef the room is most effective. Even if 
the furniture and woodwork be in 
eream the cream or ecru of the lace 
blends in with it beautifully and yet 
does not have the characterless effect 


of dead white or cream with white 
covers, 
For this purpose nothing {ts better 


than the Imitation fillet squares of lace. 
These come by the yard, already join- 
They will not be wide 
however, make the cover, so that 
two strips will have to be jolned, The 
joining is made ornamental by a piece 
of cluny or terchon lace of tha same 
shade ag the fillet lace, It will take 


to 


| two or three of these fillet strips Joined, 


according to the sizes of the squares. 
When the strips have been vo joined 


lwith the lace and an oblong has been 


formed edge the covers about the edg- 
Ing to match the Insertion. To make 
the bedroom set complete there should 
be a bedspread and pillowshats or, if 


one of those hollow roll bolsters ts 
used, a bolster throw for it, Under 
these Jace covers in every instance | 


should be white or cream color foun- 


enough, ; 


white satin arranged at the left side 
toward the back gives a chie effect. 

! ‘To the right Is a white coque feather 
(urban, Such turbans, bullt entirely 
of feathers, both In black and white, 
are a seasonable novelty which hae 
‘caught on” immensely, The brim in 
these hats is negligible, but the trim- 
{ming soars sometimes to the height of 
a foot or more, It is worn tilted over 
upon the right ear in a most engaging 
fashion, . 

The trimming upon the next hat ta 
‘the {llustration {6 not unlike the ex- 
| quisite maidenhair fern which hides ta 
the wood, Hut goura feathers com- 
pose the new algrets and are here used 
poised upon the crown of a stovepipe 
hat built of velvet and satin, The lines 
of this hat are disposed to be harsh, 
but are softened by the feathery aigret 

This hat shows the new softly shirr- 
ed crown of black velvet. The brim 
has a facing of cream velvet, which is 
wonderfully becoming to the face, The 
}garniture is a unique arrangement of 
| feathers posed coquettishly upon the 
\front of the brim, The veil which goes 
ie the hat is called a “bobby” veil, 


for the Chbite Bedroom 


dations, If cream color 1s desired @ 
cream batiste or cambric can be used, 


The lace covers can be simply laid 
upon these foinduations or basted te 
them 


If expense ja no object rea! fillet an@ 
{real cluny lace may be used, but if (@ 
is necessary to economize you will find 
‘that imitation fillet Joined with imita- 
jtion cluny lace or torehon in cluny de- 
sign is very effective. 


! FOR A GUESSING CONTEST. 
MPHERE are many flower courtshipa, 
| but here is one that may be new te 


| you. It was new to the gieste at & 
|porch party, where decorations cone 
| sisted of garden flowers, where nase 
}turtium sandwiches and: tlower docke@ 
salad were gerved and whe: the 
| prizes for the various winners in the 

bunches 


| guessing contests were lovely 
lof flowers from the hostess’ garden, 
| The answers to the questions are al® 
flowers. Here are the questi 
What is the maiden's name and 
color of her hair? Marigold 
Who te her favorite brother? Swoe 
| William. 
\ What does her brother like to co ti 
winter? Snowball, 


the 


At what hour does ber brother wake 
|her father? Four o'clock. 

What does the father administem 
punishment with? Goldenrod, 

What does the brother do thea@® 
| Balsam. 


What are her father’s name and oMcg 


in the Presbyterian church? Fildere 
| berry. 
What Is her sister's name and the 


Riack Eyed Busan, 
er’s name, and whag 
Jonquil. 


color of her e 
| What te hei 
i does he write with? 


Crocheted Novelties forthe Boudoir 


white crocheted cott 
ith siik and jace 
pleraents, the thir 


TPMINY bashers 
1 mans 
bemall maniciuie 4 


nd holds a@ powder puff, 


here 


One 
contalag 


on for favors are illustrated 
aneihe: 


la @ sewing Yuuhst 


PHUFESSIUNAL UadUs 


Fred Langmuir 


Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public, ete. 
Money to Luan on Farm 
Property 
OFFICES: SU! , Milnes Block 
( ! \ibevta 


tT ’ 


cree meen ae ene are REE 


J. Fi. Waitt, 8. A. 
Bar ter, Notary Public 


OFFICK i 
CG mi, 


tithkD AVENUE 
\ipert 


ee SAL EAN AARRAE ERA YET AAI 


Or. & MM. Riggs. 


RESIDENT DENTIST 


Opp. Wilton’ Hotel 


Brd Avenue 


F. E. Harvey 


Special Representative 


Sun Life Assurance Co., 


of Ganada 
PHONE 117 Claresholm, Alta 


G. R. Brewster 


VETERINARY SURGEON 
STOCK INSPECTOR FOR 
THIS DIstRicr, 


All Professional Services 
STRICTLY CASH 
Office at residence on SHELVIR Say 
Cor, First Ave. South. Phone 142 
Claresholin, Alta. 


i The Clareshclm Review 


An Independent Weekly Newspaper 
L. G. Shortreed, Publisher. 


Subscription Rates’ 


One year, in Canada - SL.50 
One year, to United states + 2.00 
Single Copy - - . de. 


Thursday, September 24, 1914 


Safe Jumps of Eight or Nine Stories 
Have Been Made. 

At a recent Fifty-sixth street tene 
ment fire in New York that resulted in 
more of a smoke alarm than a blaze a 
man and his wife were seen to get out 
on the ledge of a fifth story window. 
The firemen told them to wait a mo- 
ment, that there might be no need to 
Jump. The mun cried that they were 
suffocating and must jump. 

The firemen stretched the net and 
shouted for them to poise themselves 
Properly and jump one at a time. But 
even while the firemen were shouting 
the instructions the couple kissed each 
Other, locked arms and leaped. They 
came down straight and sure as a 
plummet right into the net. They re 
bounded about fifteen feet und fell in 
the net again in a sitting posture, still 
embraced, 

The firemen let them gently down to 
the sidewalk. They still sat there look. 
dng at each other incredulously. Then 
they were told there was not even a 
good fire to justify their jump. It had 
all been smoke from a smouldering lot 
of rags and other rubbish. The man 
and wife heard the news with expres- 
gions of wonder, thankfulness and con- 
demmnation of their silliness, 

Jumps of eight and nine stories with- 
out injuries have been recorded The 
mikeup of the Jumper is what counts. 
The firemen tive to be prepared for 
al) kinds) Sometimes they have to 
shift a few inches quickly because of 
the bad judgment of distance shown by 
the jumper. But in wost cases the leap 
to the vet saves life. -New York Sun, 
sane 

A Little Paint Badly Aoplied. 

The play “LL Homme de Destin” was 
taken from the stage when its triumph 
wast the zenith. One evening Nipo- 
Jeon, accouipauied by his friend Duroe, 
went in disguise to the Porte St. Mar- 
tin theater, where the piece was being 
performed, Eugene Chevatier appear 
ing as the man of destiny, They 
bought a box, but had hardly entered 
ft when the emperor broke forth in 
violent exeeratious against the “fool 
managers.” It seemed that the decora- 
tors bad left in the box pots of oll and 
print, and Into these the emperor sad 
stepped. Wild with rage, be rushed 
from the house and to make twattere 
Worse was recognized in the lobby, No 
paper mentioned the incident, but by 
order of the emperor the play wag 
never produced ugain, and Chevalier 


Dever appeared svgain as thy man of 


@estiny—and all on account of a tittle 
paint badly applied. ® 

— —— , 4 
Theory and Practice 


Little Beatrice was taking piuno lew 
@ons and learning at the sape time 
Something of theory. Like wany other 
children, she disliked practicing her 
®nger exercises. One day her mother, 
who was working tp an upstairs room, 
moticed a sudden lull tn the playing. 
Bhe looked down and saw Beatrice sit- 
ting perfectly motionless. 

“Beatrice, why don't you practice?” 
gwhe called down abarply. 

“1 am practicing, mother.” replied 
the child with perfect self assurance 
“I'm practicing my theory.” — New 
Bork Post ‘ 


quakes ure by 


WHE REVIEW, GLARESHOLM, aLBERTA 


SENSITIVE SEISMOGRAPHS. 


They Serve Other Purposes Than Re- 
cording Earthquakes, 
Contrary toe popular betief 
Ho Thies 


earth 


renees, AS a matter of fet. pict 
Ul places on the surface of che earth 


experience some kind of tremor or 


shake ut least Guee an tous nd iesser 

tremblinas are even tore frequent. | 
This facet has been e shed Since 

he opening throat rid of 

stitions where seistvograpls record the 

lightest movement of this earth of 

mrs 

The seismographs cin she made ta 
serve sever iter mo4 es 
besides the reeording ‘ 

Some of then aie o deticnte that a 
nilroad train runnige ao citie away wiit 
iffeet thet ‘ 

Seistnhoxraph records have freqaenthy 
eeu produced in court to stiaw that the 
yperution of hens mae bi nery prodtieed 
sufficient vibration tn mene by butidinis 
toom|ke the owners of the tactery 
ble for dhiniuices 

Probabiy the most dnusual purpose 
to Which the seistuograpl tas ever 
been put is that off determining the 
mount of vibration tp a locomotive as 
tresuit-.of dabalanced driving wheels, 
Engineers bave devised some ingen: 


ious tnethods of cutting down this vis 
bration, which means a greatly de 
creased cousumption of coul.—~New 
York American. 


TALKING FROM THE CHEST. 


Not Necessary to Put a Telephone 
Transmitter to the Mouth. 
In cise one dues not cure to stoop 


to a telephone while talking, or does | 


hot care to put the transmitter to the 
mouth, he can make bitmself heard boy 
very simple menus, Simply place the 
abdomen or the chest aginst the 
mnouthplece of the transmitter and talk 
into the open air, and the sound will 
get to the purty on the other end. The 
whole chest wall and the wall of the 
tbdomen vibrate in unison when the 
mouth is spenking, as they ure a great 
sounding board, and they will transmit 
the proper sound waves 
phragm. ‘This fs easy to try and as- 
tonishing in result. 
Another peculiar thing 
telephones at times is phantom talk 
beard in a receiver when one is wait- 
ing for central to give connection, Odd 
scraps of conversations may be beard 
in this manner They ure 
due to conversations going 
wires lying tn close proximity to the 
one that you ure using—such conver- 
sitious causing stinall oscillating cur- 


rents which, by the process of indug- | 
oscillating currents | 
to take place in your tine of Hike char- 


tion, enuse small 
ucter.—New York World. 

Few Beds In Bagdad. 

About 60 per cent of 

ulation possess ne beds 


floors of their bouses in the winter 
and on the roofs inthe summer. Owing 
to the excessive hent of these regions 
sleep is made impossible 
thun on the roof or in the open gar- 
dens. [t is an interesting sight to see 


how the women at sunset emerge from | 


their houses to prepare the evening 


meal on the roof and sprend the bed- | 


ding for the night. lunasmuch as the 
climate 1s very dry, there is little to 
fear from exposure to the night air. 
While a considerable number of the 
roofs are surrounded by latticework 
to insure a certain umount of privacy, 
by far the larger pumber are quite ex- 
posed to the gaze of curious and in- 
quisitive neighbors, 
Scotland’s Patron Saint. 

Why was St. Andrew chosen as the 
patron saint of Scotland? ‘This ques- 
tion bas been asked many times, but 
the archdeacon of whom Dean Hole 


tells mmiy be considered to have discove | 


ered the most satisfactory solution of 
the problem. “Gentlemen,” said he (be 
Was speaking atv St. Andreasv’s day 
banquet at the time), “I have given 
this difficult subject my thoughtful 
onsideration, and | have qgme to the 
soucinsion that St. Andrew Was chosep 
to be the patron saint of Scotland pe 
te discovered the lad who had 
aud ftishes.’--Dundee Ad- 


couse 
the lonves 
vertiser, 
A Difference. 

“Soy, mister, 1 bear you want a bew 
office boy?" 

“That's so.” 

“Ein the guy 

"But | don't think you will do.” 

“What's the matter? Don't 
want a new «ld?" 

"Yes, but hot a fresh one,”"~—Detroit 
Free Press, 


What's the pay?” 


you 


No Proverb to Guide Him. 

She-A_ proverb that fimt te 
gold tn the morning and iead at night, 
meaning that it’s bad for one in the 
evening, | suppose. He That's right! 
Look at the trouble Adum got into by 
enting un apple ufter Eve—-Boston 
Transcript. 

After Marriage. 

“Qh. dear, Max, what a prosaic per 
son yon are. Pm afraid we sball never 
understand each other very well.” 

“Don't you worry; Yon understood 


sys 


| my proposal all right, and that was io 


the baidest bind of prose.”—Filegende 
Riatter. 
The Change. 

“So he has ceased to be her ideal?’ 

“He has.” 

“What disgraceful thing did he do? 

“Married another girl.”—Loutaville 
Courter-Journal, 


The day is immeasurably long to bim 
who knows not bow to value apd use 
it—Goethe 


Pri iris Aqui lit 


eee Minister 
rire aceur | 


tetiealty: | 


to the dia- | 


noticed in 


probably | 
on over) 


Baydad's pop- | 
These poor | 
people rest on blankets sprend on the ; 


elsewhere | 


| above 


| Abre, 


AND WOMEN WORKERS 


Lietens to Tales of 
ndon Work- 


coe F 


om Fast End bo 


ere—-VWiage and Working Conditions 
The f I 1 alwa 
. 
TT 
t 
4 Whit 
1’ ex 
It vear et 
( eh she Us 
i I Y Asqul 
1 ork 
i Nutio 
own miu 
ting 
0 1 it issue 
Tum toid by one who was pre: 
sen r, Asquith’s reception of 
st id men’s deputation 
lust Saturday that he listened with 


deep attention to their accounts of 


personal experiences, and was evi 
dently much moved, One woman 
produced two brushes ‘from her 


pocket, and showed the Prime Minis- 
ter she had to fill the holes 
with bristles—-two hundred holes for 
2d.—-and it took hernearly two hours 
to fill one brush, though she worked 
with the skill of forty-three years’ 
The brush then sold for 
Others described 
work at cigarette packing, sewing, 
and the labor of keeping house for 
onesel! and husband and six child- 
But the most 
was told by a wo- 
man who had been driven from a 
jam factory because of insults from 
a foreman and had been succeeded 
body with that of 
later been dragged’ 


practice, 


half-a-guinea 


ren on 25s. a week, 


touching story 


by a girl whose 
baby had 
from the river.’ 

“A shilling a day, in spite of the 
Wages Boards have 
still an woman's 
Starvation wages, crowded 
factories, child- 

ren born without the hope of health, 
and at their door the tragedy of 
the unmarried mother—these are 
some of the realities of life as these 
women see it.” 

Those who advocate an increase tn 
the British preference on goods com: 
ng into Canada In order that they 
may be solid cheaper to Canadians 
would do well to consider whether 
they are serving the best interests of 
British citizenship by tending to per- 
petuate working conditions described | 
through securing increased | 
sales for English products in Canada. 
Would it not be better for the work: | 
ers In these factories, for Canada and 
Canadians, for the Empire, to require 


her 


good which 


done, is average 
Wage, 


homes, unsanitary 


, the manufacture of these products in | 


Canadian factories, where working. 
conditions are of the best standard, | 
and the wages higher than anywhere 
else in the world in similar occupa: 
tions. The description of the con- 
ditions in the above article should 
make the average Canadian housewife 


| hesitate before she buys another pot 


of jam, or some other table delicacy 
made under such conditions. When 
she buys the Canadian article she 
knows she is getting a product made 
by Canadian labor under honest work- 
ing conditions in a clean sanitary 


' factory. 


OUR PULP MILLS 


What Canada Loses by Export of Un. 
manufactured Wood Product 


What tho “Made-in-Canada” polley 
means in a practical way is seen in 


the statistles of the pulp and paper 
Industry as published in the “Journal 
of Commerce” of Montreal a few days 
ago: 

“During the calendar year 1913 
Canadian pulp mills consumed 1,109,- 
wood 


084 cords of pulp valued at 


$7,243,368; during the same year there 


| was exported to the United States an 


almost equal quantity of unmanufac- 
tured pulpwood which was valued at 
$7,070,571. This quantity of unmanu- 
factured wood was sufficient to have 
supplied 60 mills of the average size 
operating !n Canada in 1918. It would 
have made 1,036,030 tons of ground- 
wood pulp, or 617,515 tons of chemical 
Ground-wood pulp is worth at 
least $14.00 a ton, which would give 
$14,490,420 for the value of the pulp! 
that could have been made from this 
wood by this process. Chemical Abre | 
{se worth at least $38.00 a ton, which 
would have brought the value up to 
$19,665,670. In reality only $7,070,570 
was realized by the sale of this ma 


terial The pulp industry lost the 
t 


| profit 
manufacturing this 


| middle of last 


that could Lave been mad: 


wood into pulp 


and the country as a whole lost th 


value represented by the costo 
lianufacture in the form of wi 
“Laws forbidding the export of 
pulp 1 cut from Cro 
e diff ‘Gan 
uv reduce 1 « 
to ) 
i n \ ‘ 
st i 
d io 
a ot Lac 1 
pulp in ada it ed a 
I i ver twel eis j i 
it, Over at 12, increases tat 


hilary increases have been p 
ed in the past three or fo ea 
since Quebec and other  provinec 
determined on a “Made-in-Canada 


policy for the pulp tndustry as far 

crown lands are It woula 
be well if some be de: 
vised whereby the export of unmanu 


factured pulpwood from 


concerned. 


means could 


will be seen above 


through the 
additional factories that 
quired to manufacture the wood now 
exported in its raw A vast 


pay 


state, 


number of the unemployed at present 
remunerative | 
work, and there would be a quicken: 


in Canada would find 


iny of business in all channels as a 


result of the increased circulation of 
money, 


PRESIDENT WILSON 


AND MANUFACTURER 


“ U.S. First Citizen and Head of the 


Baldwin Locomotive Works Ana- 
lyze Trade Conditions 


“The Daily Iron Trade” of Cleve: 
land, the authoritative organ on ail 
matters pertaining to iron and ste) 
published the following 
on June 8rd shortly after Presi- 
dent Wilson’s interview in which 
he referred to the present trade con- 
ditions in United States 
nothing to do with the tariff, 


“The legitimate results of the “free | 


trade” tariff law, now hecoming maai- 
fest throughout the country, seem to 
be surprising the authors of that 
measure. Mr, Underwood has not 
been heard from for several months, 


| Benator Simmons still is studying the 


Bteo is, but Mr, Redfield is just 


as sanguine as ever, for figures, facts | 


and concrete instances roll off Mr 
Redfleld’s back like water off a duck, 
President Wilson is now more positive 
than ever that “the tarlif has nothing 
to do” with the deepening industrial 
depression which he now admits but 
which he strenuously denied tn the 
January, when The 
Daily Iron Trade first printed its 
“Million Men Idle” article. 
“Brushing away with one sweep of 
his arm the 
nbout this iniquitous “free trade’ 
law by the Washington politicians, 
Bamuel Vauclain, head of the Baldwin 


Locomotive Works, Philade!phia, laid | 
the plain, hard and uncontrovertible ' 


facts before the boiflermakers’ con- 
vention a few days ago. He pointed 
out that 
fron and steel commodities are being 
carried down to European levels by 
the actual operation of the Simmons: 
Underwood-Wilson “free trade” law, 
therefore the wages of American work- 
men will come down to that European 
level just as surely us the sun 
Facts are facts and 


“Psycholc gy” 


will 
shine to-morrow, 
logic is logie. 

obsess President Wilson, but there tis 
no psychology, nothing but logic, tn 
the expectation among real students 


may 


of actual business that the entire 
American industrial and commercial 
fabric will be dragged down to the 


dead level of WPuropean practice, 
wages, profits and, therefore, stand- 
ard of living. 

The question now before the Amerli- 
can people, and there is no use quib- 
bling about it, {1s whether the Ameri- 
can workmen and his family will be 
satisfied when he has finally been 
dragged down to the European stand- 


‘ard of living, which now seems as in 


evitable as fate under this iniquitous 
“free trade” law; or whether he will 
pierce through the fine phrases and 
lovely sentiments of the present spon: 
sors for the country’s depression and 
cast them out. “There are many in 
United States who are predicting a 
big reaction against the low tariff 
policy of the Wilson regime. Whether 
this will take place or not is difficult 
to foretell, but it {s no doubt unfor. 
tunate from President Wilson's stand: 
point that his tari@ reducttons. syn- 
chronised with a world-wide depres. 
elon.” 


CLARESHOLM BRANCH - \WY, 


TTT 


privately | 
owned lands could be prohibited, As | 
a law of this kind , 
would result ‘n about $20,000,009 be: | 
ing retained in Canada and circulated 
rolls of the sixty | 
would be re: | 


editorial | 


as having! 


—— ss OO 


stuff and fustian cast | 
Phone 8 


—==r.0. 0 —oe=——=0 0 


r-. 


=] 


since the selling prices of 


—— a 16 


Military 
Camp 


EB JARNIISS 


OF CANADA 


Af quipped\branch linus been opened at the Military Camp 
at Valcartier—Quebee—for the accommodation of the Overseas 
Forces 

Transfer of monies toand from the Military Camp will be made 
by all branches of the UNION BANK OF CANADA, free of 
charge. 

Fk 1s to the new br h, the forwarding and 


depositing of moz.ey, will be cheerfully furnished, 


R. SHANKS, Manas 


Branch also at Barons 


PRIGE ANNOUNCEMENT 


Buyers to Share in Profits 
Lower Prices on Ford Cars 


Prices effective from August 1, 1914, to Aug- 
ust 1, 1915, and guaranteed against any reduction 
during that “mes 

Touring Car 
Runabout $540 
Town Car $840 


F. 0. B. Ford, Ontario, fully equipped. 
In the Dominion of Canada only. 


$590 


FURTHER, we agree to pay. as the buyer's share, from 
$40 to S60 per car (on or about August 1, 1915) to every retail 
buyer in the Donnuion of Canada, who purchases anew Ford 
car between August 1. 19U4, and August 1, 1915, provided that 
we sell 30,000 cars between the above dates, which output will 
enable us to obtain the maximum efficiency in our factory pro: 
duction ond the minimum cost in our purchasing and sales de- 
partments. 

For further particulars regarding these low prices and 
profit-shariiig plan, seg the nearest Fort Branch or Ford dealer, 


Ford Motor Company 


OF CANADA, LIMITED. 
Ford, Ontario, 


Sold by D. B. Vanhorn 
ARARARPAP RAR ARIEL AAP AAA 


ae Se ET al] 


FARMERS TAKE NOTICE 


contents, live stock, Imple- 
ments and produce in The Wawanesa Farmer’s Mutual 
Fire Insurance Company, rates $1.10 per $100.00 insur- 
ance for 3 years, note accepted same as cash. ‘This 
company is perfectly reliable ard its pclicies are better 
adapted to farm insurance than any others issued,, 


Insure-your buildings, 


THOS. BERNARD, Sole Agent 


Farm Property only accepted by The Wawanesa Mutual, 


REAL LSTATE LOANS AND INSURANCE 
RENTAL AGENT 


Claresholm Realty Co. 


Office, Railway St. 


SS 
$1.00 PER DAY 


Ceril Hotel 


EUROPEAN PLAN 


COTE & BELL, Props. 


Corner 4th Ave. and 3rd St. 


CALCARY, ALTA i 


PHONE 6244 


f= 0 oa 


MOVING PICTURES 
AT THE REX THEATRE 


Every Night From 8.30 to 10.30 
(Dooré open at 7.45.) 


COMPLETE CHANGE OF PICTURES EVERY MON. WED. & FRI. 


ADMISSION: --Adults 25, Children 15 cents. 
~~ {-) | —_____} -} 


—a 1. 


Claresholm, Alta, 


A Repre SU atati 


Height Without Sho 
14.3 to 15.3 Hands 
15.1 to 15.3 Hands 


Horses offered must be from 5 to 9 years old, sound in action, wind and eyes. otherwise practically | 
sound; quiet and well broken, and in : ; 

Mores in foal are not required, neither are any white ov light colored horses, 

Every endeavor will be made to keep the appoitutment, but should circumstances pre vent or delay in- 
spection, the Brirish War Otice will not hold itself responsible, and any collection of animals will be entirely 


Riding 
Artillery 


Denese. 


aeeenened 


at the owner's risk. 


The Remount Officer will only select such animals as come within the ps cifications quoted, 


otherwise suitable, 


GOD SAVE THE KING 


1s eleaaraa  eatetin a ee RR te Mae Rand = he cei nel 


af the Re 
CLARESH ii OL 


For the purpose of purchasing Saddle and Artillery horses | 
for the British War Office 


q> 


es 
Riding 
Artillery 


good condition for work, 


Le A ae var 


a 


Jemount Commission 


AY, SEPT 


THE REVIEW, CLARESHOLM, ALBERTA. 


Attend at 


5TH 
| 


Weight: 


3 


PR Ere ae 


LOST |! CATACOMBS, 


| exciting Adventure of a Paris Geos 
logteal Explorer, 

i Paul Philippard, a male nurse ina 

4) Paris hospital, who during his spare 


moments is a zealous student of geo- 
logy, had recently a most unusual 
and trving experience 

He had a longing to explore the 
Paris catac i and secihng some 
work ved in an exervation | 
which uuni¢ with them, he 
let himesel lown h a rope to a 
depth of about Trusting to 

5 per which he carried with 
; H i through the under- 
H ! : arking the passe 
ind there with white 

8 find his way back 

ned vaults and the 

stones, and became so absorbed in 
his observations his way 


that he lost 


When he ed to return he mis: 
1 hed hith- 

’ iseover the 

uit he found that previous 


had also marked the 
eontused him, 


stones 


Finally, his ight went out and he} 
| became desperate, He barnt his 
fingers with the end of the taper in 
trying to keep it alight, and when 


t went out set fire to a newspaper 


. ©) Whieh be carried with him, He next 

1,000 to 1,300 lbs, {| purnt the strings of his apron and 
1,200 to 1,350 lbs. & used up all his matches, Still he 
failed to discover the exit. Houce 

,. | then passed in vain attempts to reack 

| the light. They were hours of 

anguish, when he recalled the ter. 


; 


and are Fi 


PoaterdocdoaterSocle-adersocteahesSockesSoofocte-shoeiecloatesostesloctonne coete-stecteareseoereareeeeateateetesteeleete 
we ¥, 
t3 <9 
a 3 
: BUSINESS MEN : 
mH ec 
o ee 
& * 
oo ‘ 
3 4 & 
¢ WHY NOT ADVERTISE?) } 
oo "3 
b3 sg < 
oe * a Cy 
& Every issue of the Claresholm Review ‘ 
Se ; s nS 
ss goes into hundreds of the best homes + 
% QJ 
te of the district and to the people who 4 
> oe 
4 you must look for your patronage. 5s 
: $ 
; R % 
ss The Review is read by every member % 
ns of the family into which it goes. + 
?¢ oe 
¥ “ 
& You want to build up a larger busi- 2 
& ' ; & 
& ness and one of the best ways is to 
> advertise in % 
& eS ¢ 
" ¢ 
: 3, 
+ THE CLARESHOLM RE VIEW 4 
+ z 
2 3 
eter nr eSo-aSe-ase-ae-ahecdocce-sse aSoasessosle-sle seoeseecesreeredre- aio eroeleser ste eosne sesso aseatestestesie oteeeesees 


Strychnine is one of the most puwer- | 


ful vegetable poisens known, but it has 
very odd effects. Up to about one 
thirty-second of a grain it is often used 
mn medicine as a stimulant, 
more is required to bring on that pe- 
culiar state known as “tetanus,” In 
which the muscles lock themselves up 
into sucb bard masses that they are ag 

{rigid as bone. An overdose, however, 
ie 4 been known in at least ove in- 
; stance to cure itself.—Exchunge. 


H How He Felt. 
; “Youn act as though yon thonght 
: yourself superior to the government.” 
: “Well,” replied the genial egotist, “I 
do feel slightly superior. As a tax- 
| payer when | owe the government any- 
; thing | pay. When the government 
i owes me anything it does as it likes 
; about the matter.”—Wasbingtun Star. 


Plenty of Hopeless Ones. 
At the age of twenty-five a man can | 
} be forgiven for. thinking he knows It | 
‘all, but if he hasn't changed bis mind | 
at forty there is nv bupe for bim.—Te | 
ledo Blade. H 


Faint Heart. 

“Have you spoken tu father yet?” 

“Certainiy. 1! aaid ‘“ioud evening’ 
when | pussed him tn the ball, "— Penn: 
syivania lunch Howl, 

W] Cirenmstances are beyond the contro! 

of man,’ but bis cosduct is in bie own, 
power.— Keaumont. edt 


Very little | 


NURSED A HOT TEMPER. 


Something Hage to Give Way When 


William Morris Broke Loose. 

Thougb explosive tempers may not 
be admirable and temperamental ex- 
plosions are not always barmlessly ex- 
pended, they are always preferable to 
Joreness, sullenness, brooding resent: 
ment or cold anger, Arthur Compton: 
Rickett in his study of William Morris 
—that “jolly yivid man,” as be terms 
him—relates several new instances of 
Morris violent thunderclaps of temper 
and swiftly ensuing snoniness and 
sweetness, 

Once while he was painting he was 
called from the room, and presently his 
startled model heard him furiously 
anathematizing some one _ vutside 
whom he dismissed or ejected and 
then returned a moment later still boil- 
ing with wrath. He could not resume 
his work, but made wild dashes about 
the room, growling and muttering, un- 
til at last in a culminating access of 
rage he took a flying kick at the door 
and with a vast crasbing and splinter- 
ing smashed in a panel, It was too 
much for bis model's nerves, and be 
started to flee, but at that moment 
Morris, with his ire entirely gone now 
that the explosion was over, turned 
with a beaming smile, and assored him 


genially: 


“It’s all right, it’s all right, but some- 
; ting bad to give way” i 


FLAVOR OF FOOD. 


{t Is an Important Factor In Digestion 
and Good Healtn. 

If it were not for duvor we should 
not digest our food properly. Epicu 
reanism in eating is the handmaid of 
good health. Flavor has veep called 
the soul of food, ‘he viands that sre 
most agreeable to our sense of taste, 
those we enjoy most, are those we are 
most likely to digest well and from 
which we are must likely to derive the 
maximum of nourishment 

A book was devoted to this subject 


by Henry T. Finck of New York. He! 
In a re | 


called it “Food and Flavor,” 
view of it the Scientitic American says: 
“The psychic factor of desire must pre- 
cede ingestion or results will be unpro- 
pitious, To each cent spent for nutri- 
went we add tive wore for Havor, Fla- 
vor, In short, bus nu nppetizing value, 
a health value, a commercial value, 
“The evolution of a discriminating 
appetite and the education of the cook 
must go band in hand. But your glut- 


top is never an epicure. Rational mas- | 


tication must accompany the highest 

enjoyment of food, aini iu itis enjoy- 

ment ile perfect assimilation and 

health. It is fuvor thut stimulates the 

flow of the digestive juices; it in the 
| digestive juices that prepare the tuud 
| for the extraction of nutriinent.” 


‘| plorer reached a’ 


t 
f 


rors of miners lost in the depths of 
a pit; and began to think that his 
lart hour had come. He would die 


| of hunger and thirst, and become, 
| perhaps, a raving maniac. 
| At this point the geological ex: 


shaft that appar- 
ently led upwards, and climbed to 
the top with desperation, only to find 
himself under the cast-iron lid of a 
drain, He knew he was close to the 
surface of the street and shouted 
himself hoarse without being heard 
Finally he descended again to the 
bottom of the shaft and groped about 
in pitch darkness for several minutes 


more, At last he came to another 
shaft through which he saw the 
light, but it was too narrow to climb. 


He shouted as loud as he could fot 
a quarter of an bour, and was finally 
heard by some workmen, who let @ 
rope down to him and pulled) him 
up. He had been in the catacombs 
from 9 a.m. to 3.380 p.m. He came 
out in the courtyard of the V de 
Grace Hoc vital, nearly a mile away 
| from where he had entered the cata 
combs, 


Not Worded the Same, 

Just as the family was about to sit 
down to the evening meal the minis- 
ter unexpectedly dropped in and was 
asked to join them. 

When the maid set the table she 
had turned the plates bottom side up, 
Written on the bottom was the name 
of the manufacturer, 

The minister was asked to say 
grace, and as he did so he reverently 
bowed his head abovo his plate. 

When he had finished the little 
five-year-old daughter of the house 
picked up her plate, looked at the 
manufacturer's name closely and 
said: 

“Papa, it doesn’t say that on my 
plate.” 


His Mouth Full, 


A. certain town council after a pro- 
tracted sitting was desirous of ad- 
journing for luncheon, The _ pro- 
position was opposed by the mayor, 
who thought that if his fellow coun- 
cillors felt the stimulus of hunger 
the dispatch of business would be 
considerably facilitated. 

At last an illiterate member got 
|; up and exclaimed: 

“T ham astonished, I ham surpris- 
| ed, I ham amazed, Mr. Mayor, that 
you will not let us go to lunch!” 

“I'm surprised,’ exclaimed one of 
his colleagues, ‘‘that a gentleman 
who has got so much ‘ham’ in his 
mouth wants any lunch at all!’— 
London Globe, 


The Holy City. 

Medina, the holy city, triumphed 
long ago over all the rivals in var- 
fous parts of the world which bore 
the same name, which means simply 
olty.! Notable among them were 
the old capital of Malta and Medina 
Sidonia in Spain, The Arabian city 
was originally known as Yathrib, but 
owes its later name, Fl-Medina (the 


city) o* Medinat Rasul Allah (the 
city of the apostle of God), to the 
Koran, To a'good Mohammedan 


there is only one city ‘with a big C.” 
Tommy ‘Told, 

Schoolma'am—Now, I want all the 
children to look at Tommy's hands 
and observe how clean they are and 
see if all of you cannot come to 
school with cleaner hands, Tommy 
perhaps will tell us how he keeps 
them so niece, 

Tommy—-Yes'm, Ma. makes me 
wash the breakfast dishes every 
morning, 


Needn't Stand For That, 

Billy, while being reprimanded by 
his teacher for some misdemeanor, 
| sat down, leaving her standing. 

She reminded him that no gentle- 
man should seat himself while the 
| lady with whom he was conversing 
| remains standing, 
| “But this is a lecture,” replied 
Billy, ‘and I am the audience,” 


Father's Feelifigs. 
“What did father say, Algy, when 
| you asked him for my hand?” 
“Oh, he said ‘yes’.” : 
“Anything more?”’ 
“Er—yes; ‘Good Lord!’ I believe.” 


Great Ability. 

“Has that prima donna any intel- 
lectual accomplishments in addition 
to vocal skill?” 

“Yes,” replied the manager. 
“When it comes to salary she’s a 
lightning calculator." 


War on Wild Horses, 

The Canadian Government has de- 
clared war on a herd of witd horses 
which has terrorised western Ale 
herta. 


oo 


Firebox linings withstand years of use be- 


cause made of McClary Semi-Stecel. See 
! 4 bd Ae 
As ee | a Gee 
= SY XR ti dh GRO 
Z ee 
Lan fe) You ll notice the linings are 
a made in nine pieces. ‘Where’s 
a good reason--ask the McClary dealer. 


Sold by W. M. 


SL tte 


ARES) Knee, LAR ieeeout Resi 


For a Real Good Smoke 


Buy at the Wilton Hotel Tobacco 


fa 


ROSS 


eh? 


tect 


Stand 


The Tobaccos at this stand are always the 
best because the customers are so many that a 
new supply of tobacco is on order all the time. 


A new shipment of Tobaccos, Pipes, Pouches 
and a special order of cigars have just arrived and 


are now on sale. 


Ask any one where the best cigar stand is in 


tow and they will say at 


WILTON HOTEL TOBACCO ST: 


L 


J. A. MITCHELL, Prop. 


HIDING THE JOKER NUGGET. 


An Incident of the Early Australian 
Gold Diggings. 

Among the rich tinds in the Austra 
Han gold diggings the Joker nugget 
ranks among the chief. 
scale at thirty ounces and was sold for 
$600. 


a man’s hand, thick at the wrist part! 


and tapering off toward the fingers. 
The claim had been a good one from 
the first, and the owner did not have 
to work bard. One duy be was reclin- 
ing full length idly searching for nug 


gets when he caught sight of the Joker. | 
covered it with his hand | 
and sat up, rather wondering how he | 


He at once 


would secure the treasure withone be 
ing seen. If the find became known 
every man in the field would tramp to 
the spot und Invade bis claim and 80 
prevent his working 

A man inan adjoining claim looked 
up. “Found anything?" he asked, “No 
Seen the color; that's all. Pitch my 
coat over to me, will yon? It's lying 
near there. | want a smoke.” “Here 
you are, mate. Bnt what's the mat 
ter? You look. pale Don't you feel 
right?” “I'm all right, only the sun 
is a bit hot.” 

He was struggling with an tnsane 
desire to laugh, but he got his coat 
over the nugget and seated himself on 
the tof of it. Then Inughter overpow 
ered bim, and be becume nysterical 
Those ahout him wondered, but thought 
the sun bad affected him, 

In a little while he gained his com 
posure und decided to go to bis tent. 
In lifting his cont he mannged to tuke 
up the lump of gold, and no one knew 
that he bad found anything. It was 
not until ten days bud passed that the 
fact was nolsed abroad, and even then 
few knew the claim whence the Joker 
came. 

Carlyle and Ceremony. 

Thomas Carlyle and tis wife were 
so wedding frightened that it ts sad 
to think of tt Replying to a letter of 
his describing bis fantastic terrors, 
she wrote: “For benven's sake get 
into a more benignant bumor or the 
incident will not only Wear avery 
original aspect, but likewise avery 
heart brenking one | see not how | 
am to go through with iw’—T. Pos 
Weekly, London. 


Isle of Man’s Busy Governor. 

For plurality in offiee the palm ovast 
go to the governor of the tsie of Man 
According to Spencer Wilpole’s we 
rount of the “Istiuud of Home Rute,” 
the governor ts chancellor, president 
of the common jaw courts, president 
of the council, president of the Tyn- 
wald court and, in nddition, acts as 
nis OWn prime titister, bome secre 
tary and head of the treasury.—Lon- 
‘ton Chronicle. 


A Case ot Dropsy. 

Sbe—Do you know tt is dungerous to 
use some words cirelessiy? ‘Thus, if 
you were to drop the tirst letter in mu- 
sie 1t would make you sick. He—-Yes, 


‘und if soldiers In buttle were to drop 


the first letter in yriddled they’d get 
riddied.—Buffalo Express. 
On the Way. 

“Why doesn’t that dachshund come 
when I call bim? The idea of sulking 
on me!” 

“He's coming as fast as he can,” sald 
the man’s wife. “He's got bis front 
legs started.”—Washington Herald 


Considerable Opening. 
“What a dear little mouth Peggy 
has.” 
“Yes; ber last dental bill amodnted 
to $87.50."—Bostee Tranacrips. 


ee 4 


bie 


In size and shape it resembled | 


| 


| 


It turned the | boy was standing 


FACED FOUR LIONS. 


Coolness and Daring yi a Plucky Kaffir 
Herdboy. 


Four lions atticked a berd of cattle 


on a farm at Romsey, South Africa, 
\ save the Rhodesian tlerald Phe herd. 
on ath thet teapot. 
amining a pair of boots he tol get the 
fay previous, when he heard a tow 
growl near him On dooking ap te 
saw that three lions had wot hold oof 
three. cows, While suother lion steed 
looking on 
The boy pulled off tis toot. aed 
threw them at tie heabesc ten ated 
then made a orisi) for them with oa 
stick, shouting at the satne fine at 
the top of bis votes te ainotter herd: 
boy to bring a gun 
In the meantime two tous had wee 
their cows down. but. eotliinge danit 
ed, the Kafir made a cust) for then 
tnd the lions moved away frat their 
prey. The boy then rounded up tis 


| 


enttle (he bad 10S heads. and while he 


was doing so bad te elise the dons 
away several times When te was at 
one side the lions would try te caoh 
the enttle on the other tlowever he 
brought all his cattle safety tate, 
though one of the cows afters died, 
the claw of a Hon havin tred 
her lung. 

For cool daring tt woul’ {to 
bent the chasing of four ‘he 
banded and with ne wert ot 
pair of boots and a sti k 
LEARNING HOW 19 SN, 
Modern Scientists Hark: to 

Thales of Miict 

When we were young i inh 
out doubt that the moles nn) 
posed of two or three ii 14 
called atoms, we listened ily 
to the stutement that 0 
gresses ip a straight cine hy 
| around in a circle, er at ' 
‘helical spiral.” Now that ler 
and believe that the simp us 
hearly 1800 parts, we ft er 
haps the helix is express me 
as well, observes the edits Mn 
¢ineering aud Mining Jour 

We believe, with the ak hat 
the so called elements tt wet 
tally the same, Whether 1s 
mute one to another re he 
keen; we follow the aleb ut 
tempting it. 

Were one of the Greek 8 
Thales of Miletinus, for ’ 
stroll into a modern asset 4 
feists and chemists, the lat idl 
be more troublesome ¢! 

He would hear the (ty i 
remarking cheerfully tha sho 
matter, for that which w ter 
is only energy, and Tha {re 
; mark, “Plagiarist.” The 5 of 
relativity, the ultra mode ists 
would tell him that space sare 
one, and Thales would si; ik of 
bis boyish debates. 
John Locke. 

Jobn Locke, whose “) the 
Human Understanding” first 
work that attracted atte Eng: 
land to metaphysical sp wis 
born at Wrington, Eng) 20, 
1632, and died at Oates, Oct 
28, 1704. The chief pur; e en. 
eay was to Ond the origi: and 
scope of buman knowle: con- 
clusions he arrived at tudy 
were that there is no suc! i ine 
nate idea; that the bum is ag 
a sheet of white paper | 0 be 
written upon; that tl! edge 
thereon written is supp! pert- 
ence and that sensation ‘tion 
are the two sources of : eas,” 
He made the fret sketel wae 
thirty-eight years of ag shed 

wat 


GERMAN FLEET FAILED 


DEFEATED IN FIRST TACTICAL 
MOVE OF THE WAR 


Britain Scented the Coming Struggle 
and Was Fully Prepared For Event- 


ualities—How Germany's Plans 
Were Nipped. 
Twelve years almost to a day be- 


fore the declaration of war, the Kaiser 
flung to the world his vaunting signal, 


of war by German ships was part of; 


this strategy, 


The plan faied because Britain 
scented the coming of war, and, 
contrary to all historical precedent, 


was prepared for war. 

It is no exaggeration to say that if 
s of the first movements in the 
sh navy could be made public 
they would stagger the empire, which 
Nlindly trusts to the readiness of the 


fleet without understanding it, and; 
without much comprehension of its 
neaning in the preservation of its 


‘ety, honor and welfare, 

It had always been Germany's hope 
to eatch divisions of the fleet separ- 
ately at anchor off the east coast 
ports, preferably the main battle 
fleet of the latest Dreadnoughts at 
Cromarty, Flotillas of destroyers can 
creep about the North Sea in time of 
peace without «arousing suspicion 
and they could, therefore, cover 510 
knots from Wilhemshaven to Crom- 
arty, the 150 to Rosyth, and the ! 
fo Sheerness, on British coasts, 
an enonomical speed, 


at 
| reserving 
enough coal for a spurt ‘at full speed 


at the moment of attack, probably 
an hour before dawn, and even then 
retaining coal sulficten to crawl 
hack to the German coast if neces: 
sary. 

An attack of that sort, inspired 
Naturally by the success of the Jap- 
anese manoeuvres at Port Arthur at 
th outbreak of the far eastern war 
in 1904, has been rendered impossible 
for Germany by the simple fact that 
our fleet was not cauglit divided, and 


that between it and = the German 
coasts there was a wide-flung screen 
of scouts and small ft constantly 


on patrol Through such a 


screen 


only one or two individual destroyers | 


coulA at best hope to creep undetect- 
ed, 

The extent of the British prepara- 
tions is shown by the loss of a mine- 
laver off the German coast. 

Tt was a daring and herole task to 
undertake. The mine-lavers are old 
cruisers of no speed and small arma- 
ment. Detection in their case means 
destruction. But the men of this 
nnnamed ship, the first victims of 
“The Day.” went willingly and holdly 
to their fate, setting their traps with- 
fn the very jaws of the tiger. 

Germany, then, has been defeated 
in the first tactical move of the war, 


she has not been able to decimate 
our battle squadrons by one wild, 
desperate hurling of her destroyers 
igainst them in the dark of night be- 
fore a declaration of war, 

Instead, our squadrons lad been 
collected, and had sailed out to in- 


tercept the enemies’ ship before they 
could steal out to attempt their pri- 
vateering on British commerce, 
German's ships sullenly retreated 
to the covering shelter of fortresses 


HAIR AND 
SKIN 


at) tM hin | 
PRESERVED BY. 


CUTICURA SOAP 


Assisted by occasional use | 


of Cuticura Ointment. 


Cutlcura Soap and Ointment are sold throughout 
the world, A liberal sample of cach, with S2-page 
Brin Book, sent post-free. Address Potter Drug & 

. Corp., Dept. 2K, Boston, U.S. a. 


Ww. tty, 1019 


while the British bull dogs waited’ 


patiently about till their prey ap: 


| istence by the force of public opin- 
ion, or the zeal of the kaiser. 
Naturally the enemy was shy about 
appearing since she was left to face 
twenty Dreadnoughts, ten of them 


armed with 13.5 inch guns, with her 
own thirteen Dreadnoughts, none of 


whieh carry anything larger than a 
12-inch gun, She has 
the margin between us in 
Sea, and in the Mediterranean 
fleet hiked away in 
a Turkish harbor, thence to announce 


the North 


“The admiral of the Atlantic greets jt had heen sold to Turkey 
the admiral of the Pacific,” when he} mates t 
sent his then pny squadrons on a, * } 
visit to the Czar of Russia. Two Settled Jake Question 
years tuter the admiral of the Pacific In Regensburg, in the middle ages, 
‘was beaten off the sens. Nemesis has tle headsman died and three appli 
waited longer for the would-be admiray C#nts presented the Ves for the 
of the Atlantic. Now it is for him Box \ test of their skill wonld set: 
to make good his bonst tle the matter, Accordingly — three 
The chances were unpropitious in CT tatiats were brought forth, for 
thle first stage of the war, vughter, , eet 
It has always been an axiom -otf Phe first headsman made with his 
the German fleet that the true plan/ Word a tiny nick in the first erimin- 
of campaizn was to cripple or to ro-, als neck, TH lop hin off 8 
duce seriously the strength of the! tere.” Ne said, and swinging lis 
Hritish flect ut the outbreak of war, | Sword round with WBTeAL swishing 
or even earlier. by secret night at: sound, lo! he did as he had said he 
, aes 5 u A } 
tacks by torpedo craft. Every book | ‘ ae ‘ ied fees 
published in Germany on naval war- u us Foceny ut Prane Mel wantaeit 
fare in the past decade has insisted |OUR his criminal’s neck, ae 
on this All the naval manoeuvres, | % Nis head and biseet the string.” he 
" the t vctical exercise of the Ger, Sid. And he did as he had promised, 
‘ M rs kh , \ iret headsine de 
man fleet have been directed to that These two first head Men NOW: he- 
end—night attack, swift, sudden, &!! to study and ponder the neck of 
Ceadly alike if necessary to friend (he third criminal, asking what proot 
und foe but at all costs deadly of skill the third beadsman should 
The covering of the North Sea with, Wdertake, when the latter with one 
flonting mines, in the sath of mer- Se at splendic sword sweep cnt 
chant vessels, before the declaration Of #ll three heads, thus finishing the 


criminal and his rivals together and 
winning the headsmanship of Regens- 
(burs amid the applause of all. 
Harvard's First Building 
No man now living can describe as 
un eyewitness the crudities of Har 
vard's first building, 
floor wus devoted 
religious and. ite 


to academic uses, 
ary 


students’ 
rudest 


above 


eolls 


while 
more 


buttery, 
quarters, 
sort ‘ 
The building was tar from weather 
proof, and more air than light was ad- 
mitted by the windows, which were 
only partly glazed, oiled paper serv- 
ing clsewhere to let in a few of the 
sun's rays and keep out the “coars: 
est of the cold,” as Artemus \Ward 
sadd when he hung an old hoopskirt 
over his chamber window at the 
country hostelry ino midwinter. 


Were 
of the 


Not even the most rudimentary of 
table equipment was supplies at the 
colloge eating room. His own knife 


and fork were carried by each student 


hen he went to cinner, and atter he 
phad finished he wiped them on the; 
table cloth.—Dial. 
A Pen Picture of Lincoln 
And now Abraham Lineoln rose 
from his seat, stretched his long, 


bony limbs upward as if to get them 
into working order, and stood like 
some solitary pine on a lonely sume 
mit, very tall, very dark, ve gaunt 


and very rugged, his swarthy features | 


stamped with a sad serenity, and the 


instant le begun to speak the un 
gainly mouth lost its heaviness, the 
half listless eyes attained wondrous 


power, and the people stood hewilder- 
ed and breathless under the aatural 
| magic of the strangest, most original 
personality known to the WWnelish 
speaking world since Robert Burns, 

There were other very tall and dark 
‘inen in the hetergeneous assembly, 
but not one who resembled the speak- 
er. Kkvery movement of his toa mus- 
cular frame denoted inflexible earnest- 
hess, and a something issued forth, 
elemental and mystical that told 
what the man lad been, what le was 
and what he would do in the future,— 
From "The Valley of Shadows," bs 
Francis Grierson, 


China's Peerless Iron Mine 
China's famous irom mine, the) 
Tayeh, the foremost in the far east, 


is especially notable for the ease with 


j whieh it is worked. Tt stands pecrless 
in the world in this respect, excaya- 
tion regiring no om line power 
The work is done by hand by the 
Chinese cooltlios The mine is reput 
jed to be inexhaustible in its ore, In 
the days of the “three k oms” the 
locality: formed a theatre of bloody 
Htighting, and the vieinity abounds in 
relies of that momorable period in 


Chinese history, It is about 
miles from Peking 
about 1.980 Chines 
Tayeldisten is traversed by ranges of 
hills and mountains, the valleys of 
whieh abound in innumerable lakes of 
ail sites, with water course facilities 
Conse ji the loealitv is riek in 
| scenery of great beauty, and the Chin- 
+ ¢se poets from alden tim ave never 
tired ight views” 
* Tayeh In the n Ie rhood of the 
Tayeh iron mines are found the 


aneient 


S.og0 Chine 
overland and 
by water 


miles 


ruins 
probably 
tons of slug 


iron 
old 


reps 


roundel 
Millions o 


por 
tooo year 
lie in 
| nod 


A Cool Hand 


| (to reeruit What ould 
; he t thing you'd do, Jackson, if 
}you were on guard duty att vider 
magazine 1 the thing blew up? 

hecruit- first thing Id do, sir 
would he a shot to give the 
alarm, — Ne Post. 


A Long Message 
The longest item of 
pled toa 


hews ever tele 


gr bewspaper was the en- 
fire 


not reduced | 


her} 
tear to hide in! 


where the ground ! 


exercises and! 
the purpose of refectory, kitchen and | 


TUE REVIEW, CLARESHOLM, ALTA, 


| Removing Odors From Mill: j 


{ A method has been discovered by 
|ton, for iemoving disagreeable odors 
‘and flavors from milk. The taste 
caused by cows eating wild onions 
| or garlic can be removed by blowing 
filtered and washed air through the 
| milk for 30 to 60 minutes, according | 
to the strength of the flavor to be re-, 
| moved. 

It is necessary to heat the milk to 
}a temperature of 145 degrees, as air] 
blown through cold milk in a similar | 


manner does not remuve the dis- 
agrecable flavor, It also has a tend- 
ency to turn the fat into butter, It 


was found that the onion flavor is re- 


moved more quickly when milk 1s} 
heated to 160°degre but this tends: 
to produce a cooked taste and also 
reduces the cream line. In the case 
{of cream with flavors‘of this kind, 
}the same method can be used, except 
‘that it requires a slightly longe* 
treatment. The loss in evaporation 
by using this method amounts to 2 
or} per cent. 


The Comparison Held | 
' A lecturer went to Yonkers with a) 
, letter toa Yonkers citizen from aman 
in New Rochelle and sneceeded in get- 
ting an engagement. His three hoar, 
lecture proved dull, dry and uninter- 


esting. Next cay Mr. Yonkers mew 
| Mr. New Rochelle. | 
“What did you mean,” asked Yor: | 


ars, “by recommending that lemon 
lecturer?” 

“TL didn't recommend him,” 

“Well, I just guess you did. I've! 
your letter right here in my pocket.’ | 


“Better read it ‘over again—care- 
fully.” | 
Mr. Yonkers did. Tt was Loncom- 


mittal: ; | 
“T have heard Mr. B.’s vecture, It is 
‘as interesting as it is instructive.” 


“And it wasn’t either, said Yoa-) 
kers. | 
“Then the comparison holds,” said 


, New Rochelle. —New York World, 


Rise in Priating Paper 
A shortage in wood pulp may be 
brought about with an indetinite con- 
{tinuation of the Huropean war, This 
ishortag2? may reach 1,000 tons daily , 
Jund would seriously retard operations 
of paper manufacturers in the United 


(States, 

Prices have advanced due to en-, 
jforeed curtailment, the average gain) 
) being about 20 per cent. Against 


| more normal quotations of $238 to $40, 

sulphite pulp has risen to $46 to $48, 
and ground wood pulp has advanced! 
from $1% to $22 to $22 to $25. 


A Queer Question 

“L have come to conselt you,” she 
said to the prominent lawyer, 
' "What is the tro ble?’ 

“T have received three proposals of} 
(marriage, and I do not know which to! 
facece |.” 

“Which man has the most money?” | 

“Do you imagine,” she asked, “that; 
,if T knew " would consult you or any | 
other Jawyer?"’—Birmirgham Age 
Tlerald. 2 


ow 


Warts will render the — prettiest} 
hands unsightl Clear the exeres-| 


conces aWay by using Holloway’s Corn | 
Chre, whieh aets thoroug’ly and pain: | 
lecsly | 
A Magical Towel 

One of the newest sanitary devices | 
for use in public or semi-public lavas | 
tories, like those in hotels and fae-; 
tories, is an electrical substiivte for 
the towel, Accorcing to the F triea! 
World, this electrical hand drier is in 
appearance merely a sheet-iron case, 
with an opening in the top. In using 
it, you put your hands in the opening, 


hand with your foot press a pedal at 
{the bottom of the cas The pedal) 
‘starts a blower, whieh om turn forees 
ir through the electric heater, and 
sends a warm current of it over your 
hands. Your hands will, it is said, be 


thoroughly dey in from thirty to for- 
ty seeonas—-much less time than any! 


one ordinarily needs in order to dry 
them with a towel. The land drier 
is quite anitary, for in usin: if you 


do net have to touch any part of it 
Pat Ahead 

An Trish soldier serving in India so 
disliked the climate thas he decided 
to make an effort to get sent homg.| 
With this object he comp ained to the, 
doctor that his eyesight was bad.) 
“Low can you prove that to me.” said 
the doctor, At a loss Pat looked 
round the yvoom before answering. 
“Woll, dector, you see that nail in the} 
yall?” 

Yes,” 

“Well” 


replied the doctor 
sald Pat, “I can’t.” 
Insurance and Assurance 
Wiat is difference 
surance and assurance? 
plained it. ire shipwreck, accident, 
hurglary, mumps or any disease are 
eventualities, and you can consequen.- 
ly insure inst them tut death is 
a certainty against whieh no company 


between in- 
An oxXpert ex. 


the 
the 


air 


Vill insure you, wut you secure th 
assurance thar a detinite sum o 
‘money will be paid on its occurrence, | 


Londen Chronicle 


The Reform He Advocatcd t 


The editor of a Lritish weekly jour |; 


nal, wishing to know what reforms 
well known men desired to see effected 
during the year, onee applied to Sir 
W. S. Gilbert, among others. Tha 

The Mikado” answered; 

\ reform which T am par- 
anvxions to see carried into 


New Testament as revised, which j 

Was sent from New York toa Chicago ° s that editors would cease to, 
jnewspacer for May Iss2. That is. ! } AS people for gratuitous 
jsue of the paper uprised twenty), Contributions, 

ages, sixteen of which were taken up hy ees 
As the New Testamen u Make up For it 

/ -- So ate and Alice re not on 
| One of the blessings Whiet) speaking terms,” | 
foverheated India thanks this conth No, but they more than make up 
“ent is the electric fan, which is rap. for it by what they v about eeeca 
idly replacing in that country the, other.--Beston Transcript ' 
old-tashioned punak operated by oe 

the wireliable  punak-wallah, wl o, The Irate Parent twho has hee n try: | 
{used to go to sleep outside the bed. ing to satisfy Gorald’s | curiosity on | 
room door and leave his vietimsa ‘to every known subject under the sun)—, 
swelter, Now, look here, Gerald, if you ask 
H ern eee fine another question, | whip you on} 

College Youth (writing to father) the spot! ‘ | 
! dad: Send me zhao Money Gerald- W-what spot, dad? — 
‘makes the mare go Sketch, 
Father (by return mail)—Yours re- —_——-—- 

Leetved, 1 onelose $50. That ought to} Selfish 

\be enough for a jackass, —Boston! J don't jike Mrs. Wombat, Wants 


| Transeript, 
A young man {fdle, 
neads.—-Italion Proverb 


an id man 


to talk about her poodle all the time,” 
“Is that so?” 
“Yes. (“he never seems to care to 
hear about my anary.” 


| consequently 


Jthe last half century 


} ite 


Vin 


TEETH AND THE APPLE 


peared, driven out to justify their ex-!t):¢ fedeFal investigators at Washing-) Expensive Sweets Sald to Ruin the 


Tecth 


Dr. Sims Wallace, late dental sur- 
geon to the London Hospital, urges 


| the adoption of a diet containing a 


good quantity of farinaceous food in a 
form which will stimulate mastication 
—brown bread and the eating of fresh 
fruit with every meal, 

The importance of the proper care 
of teeth during childhood is becoming 
universally recognized, and the Lon- 
don county council have established 
a centre for the treatment of dental 
troubles of school children with X- 
rays. 

According to investigation it was 
found that about 39 per cent. of the 
children of well-to-do parents have bad 


teeth, as ugainst 27 per cent. from 
poorer homes, This is probably ac: | 


;counted for by the fact (hat, as the 


latter children eat coarser food, their 
teeth have more work to do, and are 
stronger and cleaner, 
Their sweets are also fewer, and are 
mostly of the cheap, boiled sugar 
variety, These sweets break up clean- 
the mouth, whereas the cara- 
and chocolates eaten ‘Sy the 


y in 
mels 


‘children of indulgent parents cling to 


the teeth and ferment. 

Boys and girls should b given 
fruit in preference to sweets. Nuts 
and all hard fruits encourage mastica- 
tion. The best fruit for this purpose is 
the apple. ifen at the conclusion 
of a meal it leaves the teeth and 
mouth sweet and clean, 


Practical Proof 

“Yes, my son, I want you to make 
yourself ambidextrous, ‘l want you to 
he able to use one hand just as skill- 
fully as you do the other.” 

“That's me, dad. [ can liex any boy 
in my class with efther hand. —New 
York World, 

India’s Economic srowth 

India’s trade has increased during 
from $800,000,- 
600 to more than $1,400,000,000, Tt has 
in operation 32,000 miles of railway, 
which places India fourth in the 
world in its railway mileage, carry- 
ing 880,000,000 passe ers yearly 
rate of five miles for one cent. 
It maintains 76,000 miles of telegrapi 
line, over which messages c.n be sent 
from more than 2,000 miles at a cose 
of only 12 cents.—Wyll Street Jour- 


nal 


Tale of Two Lakes 
Lake Baikall, in Central Asia, and 
Lake Tanganyika, iu Central Africa, 
furnish similar problems for scien: 
. as both are fresh water, removed 


Is 


‘from oceans, yet both contain deep 
,se fish. 
Only ‘1e Seventh 
Guest—Delightful patty you are 
‘having tonight, old fellow. 
Host—Yes. 1 am giving it to my 


wife. It is the seventh ann’ versary of 
her twenty-eighth birthday.—Censor, 
Minard’s Liniment Cures Dandruff, 


Quick Change 

“T would rather see my daughter 
married to a poor man whom 
really loved than to the richest 
the world if she didn't care 
him.” 

“Well, you get your wish, 
about ten minutes ago eloping 
one of :our underpaid clerks,” 

“Good heavens! Where? 
man! M 
fore it is forever 
Record-Herald. 


she 
man 
for 


Speak, 


too late.’— Chicago 


Gossip 
“One-half of the women ine this! 
world retail gossip,” remarked Mr! 


Stubb as he lit his after-super cigar 
Quite considerate of you not to to 
all of them retail gossip,” snapped 


Mrs, Stubb as she washed the dishes. 


“Oh, no, only half, Maria, The other! 


wholesale London 


Pacific Blockades 
The phrase “pacific blockade” 
most 
used in internat‘cnal law for want ofa 
hetter, It means the blockade of »orts 
of another country in time of peace 


halt express 


is al- 


without the intention of waging war; ; 


in other words, it is a peaceable act of 
war. Sore writers on international 
law insist that the blockade of 


act of war without regard to the mo- 
tive of future intentions, but as’ 
means of reprisal or of compelling the 
settlement of invernatio-el disputes it 
has become an established feature of 
the laws of nations.—Philadelphia 


Press, ‘ 


Felt Her Part 


“Sle did the mad scene very well! 


She 


“All primed for ft had jus 
heen going over the meagre receipts 
in the box offiee.’—Kansas City Jour- 
nal 
old gentleman's wife 
ting into a carriage, and he neglected 


The 


to sist her 
yu oare not so gallant Jor, as 
nT wis a gal,” she exelainiocd, in 


tle rebuke 
No,” was his ready response, “and 
you are not so buoyant as when T was 

hoy Tit-Bits 

Amplifying | 

“Tl understand Colonel Flushby gave 
: good aecount of himself in the war,” 

“So he did and las been giving a 
better ever since, '--Ba'timors 
sun, 


one 


Wife cafter callers fad rone)—Hey 
dare youn scold me before company? 

Hub—Well, you know, my dear, I 
don't dare to do it when ° e are by 
ourselves.—-Boston Transeript, 


an eid 


Bad Blood 
is the direct and inevitab!e result of 
irregular or constipated bowels and 
clogged-up kidneys and skin. The 
undigested food and other waste mate 
ter which is allowed to accumulate 
poisons the blood and the whole 
system, Dr, Morse’s Indian Root Pills 
act directly on the bowels, 1 *gulating 
them—on the kidneys, giving them 
tase and strength to properly filter the 
blood—and on the skin, opening up 
the pores, Vor pure blood and good 
health take 


Dr. Morse’s * 
Indian Root Pills 


i series of native manufacture, adorned 


at} 


T saw her: 
with | 


ybe T can head them off he-, 


a contradiction of terms, but is! 


the, 
ports of a foreign country is itself an) 


-| streets 


was get- 


ADHESIVE POSTAGE STAMPS 


The First Crude Ones ‘hat Were Is- 
' sued by Great Britain 


{ The adhesive postage stamp had its 
| origin in England as a direct outcome 
et the postal reforms introduced by 
Sir Rowland Hill, whose master mind 
created not only the inestimable boon 
cf penny postage, but the means by 
which it was carried into effect—the 
adhesive postage stamps. 
! At the time of the passing of the 
| uniform penny postage act in 1839 all 
postal charges were paid in cash (usu- 
ally on delivery’ involving an enor- 
mous amount of bookkeeping on the 
l part of the post office, which would 
have been increased a hundredfold 
| when the reduced rates of postage 
came into force but for the suggestion 
| of the great postal reformer for “a bit 
of paper just large enough to bear the 
| stamp and coated at the back with a 
glutinous wash,’ being subsequently 
; embodied in the famous one penny 
| black postage lakel and its consort, 
| the twopence blue, which made their 
; debut in May, 1840, and were the pro- 
'genitors of all adhesive postage 
stamps. 
| ‘Sor three short years Great Britain 
enjoyed a monopoly of this novel and 
handy method of collecti::; postage, 
; until in July, 1848, the enlightened 
}empire of Brazil followed suit with + 


| with large numerals of value in place 
of a design, 
| In 1848 the United States entered 
; the fleld with two beautifully engrav- 
ed portraits of “ranklin and Washing: 
‘ton, while the head of Ceres, the god- 
\dess of agriculture, found p.ace on the 
first stamps of the French republic. en- 
graved by the elder Barre, which 
imade their debut_on Jan, i, 1849.— 
| Strand Magazine. — 


Minard’s Liniment Cures Burns, etc. 


“Subways of Knowledge 

The following definitions taken 
from schocl examinition papers are 
examples of those school mistakes 
where one can see traces of the rigat 
‘dea without definite form in the 
writer’s brain: 
| “Phe base of a triangle 
which we don't talk about.” 

“The subjunctive mood is used in 
a dochtful manner.” 

“Rapids are pieces of water which 
; Tun with great force down the middle 
of rivers,” 

“Excommunication means that no 
,one is to speak to some one.” 
| They furnish good illustrations of 
the smattering of knowledge, leading 
fo only a partial development of the 
‘reasoning faculty, which is rather 
characteristic of our rapid fire pres- 
ent day system of educatign. 
H — 
After 10 Years of Asthma Dr. J. D. 
| Kellogg's Asthma Remedy provec the 
only relief for one grateful user, and 
(this [s but one cure among many, Lit- 
‘tle wonder tiat it has now become 
the one recognized remedy on the 
market. It has earned its fame by its 
r er failing effectiveness. It is earn- 
in: it today, as it has done for years. 
It is the greatest asthma specific with- 
in the reach of suffering huminity. 


he side 


Food Shortage Next Yca: 

The London Chronicle says: ‘A 
tinely warning to prepare against the 
inevitable shortage in the world’s sup- 
ply of foodstulfs is given by Lord Mil- 
ner who points out that although the 
present harvest is abundant, immense 
decrease in the production of 191lo 
j must result from the fact that all the 
}able bodied males of France, Germany, 
/ Austria and Russia are now engaged 
in iight'ng. 


“Of the 650,000,000 quarters of 
wheat and rye annually produced 
throughout the world, 350,000,000 
come from these countries, and the 


other producing countries cannot pos- 
sibly make up the deficiency. 

“Lord Milner predicts thit in the 
latter halt of next year, it not before, 
all the nations which live on wheat or 
trye, will be competing fiercely for 4 
siare in the diminished supply.” 


station at the Eiffel 
Tower in Paris could easily get its 
messages to St. Petersburg direct, 
(for it is the most powerful wireless 
station on the continent. The tee- 
rife “sparking” from its antennae, 
nearly 1,000 feet above the ground 
is so distinet that those conversant 
with the Morse code can read its 
time and weather reports in. the 
of Paris without any instru- 
But there is no powerful 
| wireless station it Russia, and = the 
‘roundabout route will be necessary 
| The British government is building a 


The wireless 


pn 


ments? 


' station more than 500 feet above sea 


ilevel in a remote part of Oxfordshire, 
which will have a dozen masts, each 
as igh as St. Paul's Cathedral. The} 
station will be able, it is anticipated, 
t into direct communication with 
Eeypt in the daytime and possibly 
‘with India at night, when the ethey 
is always a bettcr carrier, 


| 
| 


| 


| 
! <A fricnd told Sir Herbert Treo thai | 
ber well-known actor had 
ina shakespeare play. 


| 
“gag: | 
Aly s the renly, “but vou must 
that both he and T are 1 
| 
| 
| 


‘pemomber 

censed gi 
called C 
press, 


‘gists. Indeed, we might be 
and Maygag.” 


—London Ex- 


o down Bri 


on 


“Why are you g3, 
the hotelkeeper?’ 

| “He gave . 
fchange for a 


Transcript. 


quarters in 
dollar.”—Boston 


me bad 
good 


Testing a Man 
An epigram of Myrtle Reed's seems } 
to have made a hit with New York 
women. In “Threads of Gray and 
Gold” she writes: , 

“The only way to test a man is to 
marry him, If you live, it’s a mush- 
room, Jf you dfe, {t's a toadstoo..” 

Bankruptcy 

“Pa, what's bankruptey?” a 
boy once asked, 

And pa, who had been “bit” 
woek, answered bitterly: 


litt’e 


put your money in your hip pocket 
/and let your creditors take your wallet 
{and coal.” 


The Perfect Life 
“Their home life is ideal,” 
"Is that 80?” 
“Yos; she goes abroad ia the sum- 
mer and he goes south In the winter, 
Perfect, isn't it?’—Buffa'o Express. 


that | 
| 


“Bankruptcy, my son, is where you | 


Ginger ‘6 Vim 
Follow the use of 
Abbey's 


vescent 
25 and 60c. at all Druggists 


and stores. Take Abbey Vita Tablets 
for Sick ‘lcrves. 


Standards of Machinery 

The statemen. has frequently been 
made that saim machinery is not d@& 
signed so much as it it built by rule 
of thumb. ‘The fact that practically 
all of it must do its work while tra- 
velling over the ground makes econo- 


my of power cnd light ‘sight the 
first consideration, Frequently the 
factor of 3afety In some important 


farts is cut to too low a point as a 
result and considerable experimenting 
is required before the machine is 
equally strong in every part. It has 
been felt, however, by the manufac- 
turers and educators who are: mém- 
bers of the American Society of Agri- 
cultural Engineers that some baste 
principles could be worked ovt in 
connection with farm machinery. The 
committee on standards has made a 
good start in this direction, but is 
first taking up some of the minor 
problems which cause a great deal 
of grief for both maker an¢. user. The 
question of standardizing parts so 
that the cost of repairs can be re- 
duced is regarded one of first im- 
portance. Such matters as standard 
screw threads; height of wheel, width 
of tire and width of tread in wag- 
gons; plough sizes and shapes; sin- 
gictrees, doubletrees and eveners for 
implements, are all receiving atten- 
tion by the committee, of which Prot. 
J. B. Daviason, of Towa State College, 
is the active head. The gas engine 
is receiving {ts share of attention, 
especially in connection with a unt- 
form method of rating the horse- 
power. This will apply to both sta- 
tionary and traction engines. Some 
progress is being made also in re: 
commendations for standard ignition 
apparatus. Tho commiitee will pre- 
sent a report at the December meet- 
ing of the society, and the papers 
will be printed. 


Climbing Alps by Funicular Railway 

Switzerland’s industries are, as we 
all know, the making of mountain- 
eers and m-lk chocolate; and the for- 
mer, if Swiss statistiis are to be 
trusted, is certainly flourishing. Ac- 
cording to the official records of !ast 
year 7,500,000 “Alpinists’ climbed 
the Alps—by funicular! 

Mountain climbing by railway is 
becoming so popular that Switzer- 
land now boasts of no fewer than 
forty-eight funicular railways of as- 
sorted lengths, irom tho little Mazil- 
Berne to the great Jungfrau line. 

The latest Alpine sport is to break 
fast at the station on your arrival, 
lunch in the Alps, and dine at your 


hotel in the’ evening—all withia 
twenty-four hours. 
Spoiled the Game 
Alice was playing store with her 


youngest sister. Mother, asked to be- 
come a purchaser, played well her 
part, but in saying good-day stopped 
and kissed both children 

Sensitive Alice burst into tears 

“Oh, mamma,” she wailed, “you've 
spoilt everything! You never ° kiss 
tho man in the real store.” 

Koreans and Chinese 

While the Chinese do not care for 
alcoholic drinks, but are addicted to 
opium, the Koreans like strong drink 
and do not care for opium. 


Mean Interferencs 
Bix—My wife is never happy when 
Tam out of her sight. 
Dick—My wife doesn’t iruse 
e'ther.—Yonkers Statesman, 


me, 


Flaked Corn 


Sweet food the year 
round when you have 
Post Toasties. 


Delicious bits of choicest 
Indian Corn, rolled thin as a 
leaf and toasted to a golden 
brown. 


Brought to you fresh, crisp, 
and sweet, in moisture proof 
packages— always ready for 
the table. 


Open the package in a jifty, 
add cream or milk—-maybe 
a little sugar. 


For breakfast, lunch 


supper— 


Post 


Toasties 
---Fine ! 


sold by grocers 


or 


Canadian Postum Cereal Co., Ltd, 
Windsor, Ont. 


No 


Ontario Veterinary College 


Under 
ment 


the 
of 


control of the 
Agriculture of 
Mstablished 1862, 
with the University 
‘Toronto. 
wa JV. B.—College will re-open on 
Thursday, the Ist of October, 1914, In 
the sw College Building, 110 Unt- 
versity Avenue, 


TORONTO, CANADA, 
Calendar on Appl!ication 
E. A. A. Grange, V.S., M.S, Principal 


Depart- 
Ontario, 


Affiliated of 


ARLINGTON] 


WATERPROOF COLLARS AND CUFFS 
Something beter than tinen and big 
laundry bills Wash ft Aith soap and | 
water All stor4s or direct. State style 
and size. For 250 we will mat you 
THE ARLINGTON COMPANY OF CANADA, | 

Limited 

68 Fraser Avenue, Toronto, Ontario 


Soup problemas solved, 
Clark does the worry: 
ing and the work— 
and assures satisfac: Th 2 
tion, } 
Order as La 


CHILDREN TEETHING 
BABY IS VERY COMFORTABLE AND 
LAUGHS DURING THE TEETHING 
PERIOD. THANKS TO 


Mrs. WINSLOW'S 
SooTHING SYRUP 


PURELY VEGETABLE—NOT NARCOTIC 


A Qcal Lever Gimulation 


OLD WATCH FREE. 


A. atrnightforward 

offer from an establi 
irra, We aro ciring away 
Watches to thorsands of 
people all over the 
world a@ @ hoge 
Qdve:tisemont, Now 
fe yo ehanea to 
obtsingino, Write 
Rov, euclosing 95 
cents for cna of our 
fashionable Ladies’ 


cartiaga pald to wear 
with che wateh, which 
will be gives 

(these wateles are 
gcaranteed five years), 
you ad 


led by the Coldstreams. 


ne 


‘THE REVIEW, CLARESHOLM, ‘ALTA,’ 


A Thought For Today 

Get knowledge all you can; and the 
more you get, the more you breathe 
upon its nearer heights their invigor- 
ating air and enjoy teh widening pros- 
pect, the more you will knov, and feel, 
}how small is the elevation you have 
}reached in comparison with immeas- 
jurable altitudes that yet remain un- 
| sealed. Be thorough in all you do, and 
;remember that, though ignorance of- 
jten may be innocent, pretension is al- 
{ways despicable. Quit you like men, 
jbe strong. and the exercise of your 
{strength today will give you more 
; strength tomorrow. Work onwards, 
}and work upwards; and may th? bless- 
ing of the Most High soothe your 
cares, clear your vision, and crown 
your labors with reward.—W. FB. Glad- 
stone, 


The Grenadier Guards, tn which 
the Prince of Wales now holds a 
commission, is the premier regiment 
of the Foot Guards, though it is not, 
of course, the oldest, an honor claim- 
The Grena- 
diers, however, have been in exist- 
ence for just over two centuries and 
a half, having been formed as a 
bodyguard for Charles II, The regi- 


ment has the King as its colonel-in-| 


chief, while the ‘Duke of Connaught 


fs its colonel. 


“What can I use to clean carpets? 


o” 
asked a correspondent, who signed 
herself, rather bashfully. “Young 
Bride.” 

“Have vou tried your husband?” 


replied the answers editor, who lost 
his position just a 
the reply appeared. 


’ ' 
“Why, Mrs. Murphy, you look quite 


festive today. What's the matter?” 

“Wot! ‘’Aven’t you ‘eard my Bill 
comes out today?” 

“But I thought the judge give him 
seven years.” 

“Yes, but they're letting ‘im © out 
nearly two years earlier cos ‘e's be- 
haved so well.” 

“Lor,’ Mrs. Murphy, what a comfort 
it must be to ‘ave such a good 
‘usband!" 


What Germany Has Sacrificed 

By act of war Germany cut herself 
off from trade with Great Britain 
that in 1911 amounted to $487,000,000; 
from. trade with the Russian empire 
that in that year rose to $815,000,000, 
and from the French trade, which 
was then $266,000,000. German ex- 
ports and imports rose from $3,639,- 
000,000 in 1908 to $4,715,000,000 in 
1912. The British navy. aidec by the 
;French fleet in the Mediterranean 
and the small Russian fleet ia the 
| Baltie, Hee blockaded the vast bulk 
of this frade entering and departing 
in ships carrying yearly 100,000 car- 
goes froin German ports, the chief of 


| Altoona, Luebeck, Danzig and Warne- 


;meunde, Of the great mercantile navy \ ed. he had more than one passage of 


which the fleets of the Triple Entente 
are holding in check, more than three- 
quarters belongs to the German na- 
tion.—New York Times. 


The Solidarity of the Empire 
The most astounding fact in this 


striking manifestation of imperiel soi 
idarity is its spontancity and its una.:- 


fecs a ‘We expect to your friends 
Co and “sew then: the beautifal watch, 

@ood to be true, bat send 
LikMs & ELOYD, Whotenle 
, Cornwallis Road, Lemdor, Ma 


is no more necessary 

thanSmallpox, Army 
experience has demonstrated 
the almost miraculous effi- 
Gacy, and harmlessness, of Antityphoid Vaccination. 
Be vaccinated NOW by your physician, you and 
Your family. It is more vital than house insurance, 
As your physician, druggist, or send for “Have 
you had Typhoid?” telling of Typhoid Vaccine, 
sesults from use, and danger from Typhoid Carriers, 


-THE CUTTER LABORATORY, BERKELEY, CAL, 


PRODUCING VACCINES © GERUMS UNDER U, S$, GOV. Liceuss 


Quite Successiul 

A well known English bishop, as he} 
was going about his diocese, stopped | 
the porter of a lunatic asylum, and 
asked how a chaplain whom he, the 


—= | shawl, 


| there are some thirty articles 


imity. And this spontaneity, which 
has demolished in a mo:aent tha 
theories opposed to the principle of 
imperial unity, has shown the solidity 
of the bond which unites tho varied 
parts of the empire. All the citizens 
of the empire today realize that there 
exists between them a solidarity of in- 
terest which all have a cuty to de- 
fend in equa] mecsure.—La Patrie. 


Queen’s Treasures 

Among the specially treasured per- 
sonal belongiugs 
vith the queen from one royal resi- 
}dence to another, are a Bible and a 
both wedding presents’ from 
the late Mrs. Giadstone. Altogether 
on the 
list, including ten photographs of 
different members of the royal family. 


Minard’s Lini, ‘ent Relieves Neural- 


bishop, had lately appointed, was ia 

getting on. i | 918: fot 
“Oh, my lord,” said the man, “ Is | 

preaching is most successful. The} Very Restive 


hidiots ' enjoys it particklor!” 

Complete in dtself, Mother Graves’ 
Worm Exterminator does not require 
the assistance of any other medicine 
to make it effective.. It does not fail 
to do its \ ork, 

Sure of Herself 

“Do you'think,” asked the widower, 
“you could leara to love my children 
as yon - 

“Oh, yes," replied the anxious maid- 
en, “I thiak I should care more for 
them really than if they were my own, 
because I shouldn't have to worry so 


The Caller—You say that your son 
dislikes the country and wants to go 


to the city. Does he seem very rest- 
ive at home? 

Mrs. Tungtwist—Yes; he's awful 
restive. He ain't done nothin’ but 


rest since he graduated from college. 
—Princeton Tiger. 
EE 
The Tourist (spending a week-end 
{n the village, to the oldest inhabit- 


ould if they were your own?” | ant)—Well, [ don’t know what you) 


do here, It’s certainly thé most dead- 
and-alive show I was ever in. 

The Oldest Inhabitant—Ah, you 
ought to wait till next week, zur, and 


\ iere, 
few hours after 


which are Hamburg, Bremen, Stettin, | 


which always go! 


A New Cure For Warts 


Dr. Felix Szontagh of Budapest re- 
commends a new and simple method 
of treating warts. It consists in cov- 
ering the wart and the surrounding 
skin, to the width of one centimeter 
with ordinary caoutchouc plaster and 
leaving it'so covered for weecks—even, 
if necessary, for two or three months. 
Whenever the plaster becomes loose 
it must be removed and replaced by 
a new piece. As a rule, the plaster is 
to be changed once in three or four 
days. 

Any adherent resident of the caout- 
chouc {s to be removed with ether or 
gasoline, care being taken that the 
wart or the surrounding: skin shall not 
be rubbed energetically, because irrl- 
tation of the skin is-not conducive to 
the disappearance of the wart. Doctor 
Szontagh says that he cannot explain 
the action of this simple method, and 
how it produces such excellent results 
from the cosmetic point of view, but 
jit is certainly efficlent. Perhaps the 
caouchouc contains some substance 

which softens the wart and causes 
| atrophy.-—Lancet. 


Its Virtue Cannot, be Described.— 
No one can explain the subtle power 
|; that Dr. Thomas’ Eclectric Oil pos: 
;sesses. The originator was himself 
i surprised by the wonderful qualities 
that his compo.nd possessed, That he 
was the benefactor of humanity is 
shown by the myriads that rise in 
praise of this wonderful Oll, So famil- 
jar is everyone with it that it is 
prized as a household medicine every- 


Survivor of Siege of Lucknow 
| The death has just taken place at 
edinburgh of Mrs, Blizabeth Ander- 
son, who was one of the few remain- 
ing lady survivors of the siege of 
|Lucknow, At the time of this stir- 
ring event in history, Mrs. Anderson's 
husband, Dr. Thomas Anderson, who 
was a son of Mr. Thomas Anderson, 
for many years secretary of the Na- 
ational bank, was a medica] officer in 
India, and was stationed at Delhi. 
| Mrs. Anderson was on a visit 1» Luck- 
now‘when the mutiny broke out, and 
‘she remained in the beleaguered city 
for nine months, and she used to re- 
jcall that she was present in the taik- 
{hana, or cellar, to which Europeans 
{went to escape the heat, immediately 
junderneath the room to which Sir 
Ilenry Lawrence was taken when the 
distingu'shed general fall. 


| Minard's ‘Liniment for sale every: 
where. 


{ The Bench and the Ber 
i Sir Edward Carson, the eminent} 
|lawyer, and leader of the Ulster cov- 
lenanters, is usually very serious in 
(demeanor, but he is a master in the 
jart of making witty and telling re- 
torts. 

| During one case in which he appear. | 


arms with the judge, who finally drew 
attention to a discrepancy between 
the evidence byNwo of Sir Edward's 
principal witnesses, one of whom was 
a carpenter and the other a publican, 

“That's so, my lord,” instantly re- 
torted Sir Edward. “Yet-another case 
of difference between the bench and} 
the bar!” \ | 
| “Do you play any instrument, Mr. 
Jimp?” 
| “Yes, I'm a cornetist.” 
“And your sister?” 

“She's a pianist.” 
| “Does your mother p‘lay?” 

“She's a zitherist.” 

“And your father?” 

“He's a pessimist.""—Ladies’ Home 
Journal. 3 


san | 
Whist 
An acquaintance of Talleyrand once | 
| remarked to him that he did not think 
}it worth Lis while to learn the game 
jof whist. Talleyrand’s reply has bee. | 
remembered until this day; “Not } 
) know whist, young man? What a dis- 
{mal old age you are’ preparing for 
| yourself!” 


“fs this train running on time?” 

“T should say so,” answered the con- 
ductor, “It can’t run any other way. 
The company has had to get so many 
extensions of credit that the whole 
‘road is running on time."—Washing- 
ton Star, | 


often encoun‘2red by liners 


ON WAY TO CORCNATION GULF 


Anderson With Southern Party 
Looking For Him—No Word 
From Bear 

The naval department has received 
& report from Inspector Mood!» of the 
Royal North-West Mounted Police, 
dated Dawson, August 16, giving the 
latest news in regard to Vilhjalmar | 
Stefansson, Canada’s Arctic explorer. 
Inspector Phillips reports that a half: 
breed trader from Fort McPherson 
states that Stefansson left Herschel 
Island in March with eight men = 


Or. 


about twenty-five dogs, to go straight 
across the ice to Peel Point or Corona- 
tion Gulf. The eight man returned, 
Treporting Stefansson had gone on, 
with the ice drifting fast. They bellev- 
ed he would mako toward Coronation 
Gulf, Mr. Anderson, in command of the 
more southern exploration party, has 
started along the coast toward Coron- 
ation looking for Stefansson, The Na- 
val department officials here believe 
that by this time §tefansson has| 
reached the Anderson party safely. 

There is no word yet from Captain 
Bartlett, who sat out on the United 
States steamer Bear from Nomo in 
search of the men who were maroon- 
ed by the crushing of the Karluk, 
and who found shelter on Wrangel 
Island. The Bear is expected to be 
heard from almost any day. 


— 


CANADA'S-SURPLUS WHEAT 


Estimates Place Home Requirements 
at Sixty-Five Millions 


The Monetary Times as obtained 
the following estimates of the wheat 
crop in Canada and of the require- 
ments of the country. The figures have 
been obtained from one of the best 
posted millers in the Dominion: Wheat 
crop of western provinces, 136,000,- 
000 bushels; of Ontario and other parts 
of Canada, 20,000,000. Total Canad- 
ian wheat, crop, 155,000,006 bushels. 
Average consumption by population of, 
say,-eight millions at five bushels per 
year, 40,000,000; required fo~ seed, 20,- 
000,000; required for feeding, 6,000,- 
000, Total home requirements, 65,- 
000,000 bushels. Exportab!e surplus, 
90,000,000 bushels, 


The Size of the Waves 


The most experienced sons of the 
sea are apt to have very exaggerated | 
ideas of the size of towering waves 
which break over the vessels during 
sea storms, and frequently waves are 
reported as having reached an almost 
impossible height. As a matter of fact 
it is extraardinary for a wave to at- 
tain a height of seventy feet, while 
the average size of great waves is con- 
siderably less, The mowitainous seas 
in the 
North Atlantic usually measure about 
forty feet, though the upward-shoot- 
ing, quick-falling water attains a 
greater altitude, The big waves of the 
North Pacific rarely measure more 
than thirty feet, while the highest 
wave ever met by an Australlan-bound 
liner in the South Pacific reached fifty 
feet. The ig waves of mil-ocean are 
much larger than those encountered 
elsewhere, and it is very rare that a 
height of even twenty feet is veached 
by a wave in the Mediterranean. 


A Suggzstive Guess 

* Bishop Ingram, Lord Bishop of Lon- 
don, England, has a pleasant habit of 
chatting with anybody he may meet 
during his walks. One day in the 
country he came across a lad who 
was looking after some pigs by the 
roadside, and the bishop paused to 
ask him what he was doing, that being 
his usual opening to conversation: 

“Moindin’ swoine,” the lad, replied, 


stolidly. 

The bishop nodded his head 
thoughtfully. 

“Ah, is that so?” he commented. 


“And how much do you earn a week?” 
“Two shillings,” was the reply. ~ 
“Only two shillings?” remarked the | 

bishop, Then he continued, pleasant | 

ly, “I, too, am ao shepherd, but | get, 
more than two shillings.” 

The jad looked at him suspiciously | 
for a minute, then he said, slowly: 

“Mebbe you gets more swoine nor 
me to moind.” 

England is the holder of the world's 
supply of tin, and the tremendous ad- 
vance in the price of that metal, since | 


' 


} 
| 
| 
| 
' 
} 
' 


much about them if they got hurt or| zee how the place ‘ull be stirred up, 


were sick.”"—Chicago Record-Herald. 


Life’s Little Sorrows 
“Rich women have no real joys.” 


ance sale of diamond necklaces."— 
Louisville Courier-Journal. 


A weak mind is like a microscope, 


which magnies trifling things, but} 
cannot receive great ones, Chester | 
field. 


Miss Flirt—Jack told me last night! 
that 1 was his very life. | 


Her Brother—Jack will soon find 
out how uncertain life  is.—Boston 
Transcript. 


phd 
» é Jr 
75's yf 
gis HE 


—— 


W.N. U, 1019 | 


| then, 

} The Tourist—Why, what's on next 
week? 

| The Oldest Inhabitant—Ploughin'’,— 


“No; the stores never have a clear |} Sketch. 


The young man had just been ac- 
cepted, In his rapture he exclaimed, 
“But do you think my love I im good 
enough for you?” 

His strong-minded flancee jooked 
sternly at him for a moment and re- 
plied “Good enough for me? You've 
got to be!” 


“Tam convinced,” sald Mrs. Twicek- 
enbury, “that we should save largely 
on dentist's bills if we should buy 
each of the children one of those new 
pyrotechnic toothbrushes."—Christian 
Register, 


First Artist—The umbrella >on lent 


me? I have len it to a friend. 
second Artist--That is very awk- 
ward. The man who lent it to my 


friend tells me that the owner wants 
it.—-Le Rire. 


Climate and Weather 


One day at school small Lola was/a}) sufferers, I consider it a duty to} 


called upon to explain the difference 
between climate and weather, 
“Climate,” answered the little miss, 


i derful rebuilder and restorer of nerve| the three rows of white t 


| 


| 


“is what we have with us all the! 
time, bui weather only lasts a few 
days."—Chicago News. 


- 


\ 


ni | war made demands upon it, the print: | 

Mother (steraly)—Young man, IT) ers are feeling the increases in the 

want to know just how serious are | cost of alloys used for linotype, mono- 
your intentions toward my daughter, | line and other lines of type. 

Daughter's Voice (somewhat agitat. | 

ed)—Mamma! mamma! He's . ot the} 

ore!—Puck, | 


Of all the .associations of Liege) 
none can ‘e recalled at the present! 
time with a more genuine thrill of 
satisfaction than the memory of John 
Cockerill, the Englishman sho found- 
the doctor is | ed the great fron and armament works | 

whieh give the city its modern indus- 
trial importance, Liege has given his | 
j name to ope of its principal quays, the | 
}neighboring Seraing commemorates 

—_ him by a salute, and all Belgium would | 

A prominent Georgia physician went | Seem to have adopted the enterprising 
throug a food experience which he! Briton'’s watchword, whieh was “Cou ' 
makes public. {age to the last. 


“Well, madam, is your husbane oui 
of danger?” 

“It isn't quite sure; 
coming again."”—Le Rire. 


FOOP FACTS 
What an M.O. Learned 


up late, but had grown very sleepy, 


ARROW:NITRO CLUB 


oy 


2% 


AND NITRO CLUB 


wy Everybody calls them ‘The Speed Shells,” 
JP for short. 

2 _Steel Lined, all the explosive force kept back 
of the shot, No side expansion, A straightaway 
blow that gets the load there quick. 

You take a shorter lead on the faet birds—get 
more of them, 

To get the Speed Shells be sure to see the Red Hall 
Mark of Remington-UMC on every box. 

Also ask for the “Remington,” our new low priced 
sinokeless shell, made for the man who needs to con- 
sider price rather than extreme refinement, 

To keep your gun cleaned and lubricated right, use 
Rem Oil, the new powder solvent, rust preventative, 
and gun lubricant, 


Remington Arms-Union Metallio Cartridge Co. 
Windsor, Ontario 


and the New Remington ‘4 


Ze 


SHOT SHELLS 


€' 


me nN 
N 


eee 


NEW MARKET FOR LIVE STOCK 
The only Public Owned Stockyard in Canada, 
SHIP YOUR SATTLE, HOGS, SHEEP TO REGINA 


Competitive Buying, Fair Weights, Highest Prices, Good Accommodation, 
For information write to the 


INDUSTRIAL COMMISSIONER, CITY HALL, REGINA 


The New Live Stock Market. 


Guard the rising generation by using always 


in the home 


EDDY’S “SES-QUI’ NON-POISONOUS MATCHES 


Positively harmless to children, even if accidentally 
swallowed, because the cemposition with which the 
heads are tipped, contain no poisonous ingredients 


No Increase in the Price of——_ 
Cowan’s Perfection Cocoa 


To reassure our customers and the T ade generally in the face of 
so many advances and rumored advances in the cost of food products, 
Tea, Coffee, etc., we have decided to anaounce definitely that there 
will be no advance in price of COWAN'S PERFECTION COCOA 
in 5-lb., I-lb., 12-Ib., 34-!b. and 1c. t! s, between now and Christmas. 
Further than this we cannot look ahe..d. 


We believe it to be the duty of all Canadian. Manufacturers to do 
their utmost during the present crisis to show their belief in the underlying 
soundness of Canada’s commercia: conditions. This announcement is 
made in face of the fact that the Cowan Company have had to pay an 
advanced price for some of their raw materials; bui it is believed that 
increased demand from Atlantic to Pacific, because of falling foreign 
imports and embargos on teas and coffees, will offse. other conditions 
and enable our largely increased factory to run full time with full of 
increased staff at full wages. 


The Cowan Company, as manufacturers of an article of unusual 
food value, are sincerely anxious to do their share in allaying anxiety 
as to employment, wages and food supplies, 


Do You Realize the Food Value 
of COCOA and CHOCOLATE ? 


Cocoa and Chocolate are foods as staple as flour. Cocoa is not 
a luxury, but a staple necessity of life, and, considered from the stand- 
point of its valus as nourishment in concentrated form pure Cocoa at 
50c. a pound is a most economical food, 


The food \alue cf Cocoa and Chocolate has been recognized for 
many years in Great Britain and Europe. The highest medical author- 
ities have made the statement that Cocoa and Chocolate are the most 
sustaining of all foods in concentrated form. European soldiers almost 
universally carry Chocolste ia their kits as an emergency ration in case 
of food short..ge, or fatigue * forced marches, and viewed from this 
standpoi: t the late Que n Victoria's gift to her soldiers in South Africa, 
tales on a new sig! ficance, 


We al: ppreciate Tea and Coffee, but, after all is said, these 
br-e.ges are m ‘evy plca-ant, slightly stimulating drinks, with little or 
no food v-l e. Co ans Ferf ction Cocoa, on the contrary is a splendid 
food as well as drink, :nd a delightful drink as well as food. 


Cowan’s Perfection Cocoa Is sold by all Grocers 
In Sib, IIb, '2Ib, 1/lb, and in 10c. tins. 


THE COWAN COMPANY, LIMITED 


H. N. COWAN, President. 


Water Power 
Few would expect to find any com 
nection between a modern hydro-ele® 


No Room-Mates | 
Little Frank was trying hard to sit 


any ha my ne pxperiende: tab Aral British sailors have. on their unt-| The visitor in whose honor bed-; tric plant and a prayer, The connee 
wi ie tes oN Pou aievine an lform a perpetual reminder of the | time had been retarded noted and’! tion is indeed remote, but not undis- 
ane als on av "e@> € { ° : | covers . T “ati 
scribed it to convalescents and other |navy's glorious past, though not, made comment: coverable, The first application of 
r ~ levery one wears them knows that! ‘I reckon you usually go to bed| water power to mechanical purposes 


weak patients, that the :cod is a wor. 


ape round, 
and brain tissue, as well as muscle | the edging of the blue collar and the 
it improves the digestion and sick | black silk scart Knotted in front are; 
patients gain very rapidly, just as {| links with Nelson. The white tapes | 
did in strength and weight. | conimemorate Nelson's most” famous 

“f was in such & low state that I victovies—Copenhagen, the Nile, and 
had to give up my work entirely, and | Trafalgar—and 1e scarf ts a token{ 


went to the mountains of this state, 
but two months there did net improve | 
me; op tact, T was 


adopted spontaneously by | ¢ 
and retained}, 


admiral, 


not quite as well as | hi amen themselves, 


| with the chickens,’ he said with 
smile, 


sulted. 
self. 


}of perpetual mcurning for the great! or on the soles of ‘the feet, 


was made by Buddhist priests when 
they employed the energy cf running 
streams to the work of turning prayer 
wheels, That, then, may be said to 
constitute the origin of the application 
of water power to perform mai's lad 
ors, the foreshadowing ef the great 
industrial development now in pro 
gress for the harnessing of the world’s 
terfalls, Mvers and streams. 


a 


“No, IT don't!" snapper Frankie, in- 
“IT have a room all to my- 


Corns Between the Toes 

ean be 
cured by a few applications of Put-| 
1am’s Corn Extractor, which acts pain: | 


ylie eit home, ever since, {lessly, quickly and with certainty. The | eereaerer st . 

: MN ‘4 ‘pon Mid not sustain me and! _—— lrenuine “Putnam's” always cures, ‘ly x His Reasoning 

it heenme plain that IT must change. | Got a Bargain jit. De Tough—I want to return this 
Then | began to use Crape-Nuts food *T had fortune told the other id - dog to the went what owns him, t 
and in two weeks T could walk a mile, day.” said ope woman “Oh, thank you!" exclaimed an} seen his ad, in the paper 

without fatigue; and in five -veeks re-| “What a waste of money!" said the} elderly woman to a laborer, who sur- The Lady % How did you KUeBS it 
turned to my home and practice, tak- other. ; rendered his seat in a London bus,} Was a “Kent” that put the aad in? 
ing up hard work again. Since thai “Not at all. T gave ihe women 50, “Thank you very much.’ De Tough Cause it said, “No ques. 
time I have felt as well and strong; cents, and she informed me that am “That's orl right, mum,” was the} tions asked, 


as [| ever did in my life, to inherit $100,000, Wasn't that a good 
“Ag physic'in who seeks to help bargain?’—Washington Star, | 


Winning Ways 


pathetic face that young} 
~~ 


» these facts public.” Name given) 
Windsor, | 


mak 


by Canadian Postum Co, “What a 


rejoinder, | 


let 


Unless you bear with the faults of 
a friend you betray your own —Sy- 
rus, 


As the woman sat down the chiv-| 
1lrous laborer said: 

“Wot I sez is, a man never crt to 
a woman = stand Some men 
young and 


lever gets up unless she's 


Ont. {fellow has™ His eyes seem so re-)! a | A 
Trial 10 days of Grape-Nuts, when’ proachful.” | pretty; Bur a ti mum, it don’. Try Murine Eye Remedy 
sgular tf 23 Not se sustair “Yes he vhe | ce no difference me, 

regular food does not seem to sustain | Yes. hh the lunchrocm where he) make no difference to me tif you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes 


the body, works wonders, “There’s a) worked he pulled in more tips than all 
Reason,” ithe other waiters combined,"’-—Cleve- 


or Granulated Eyelids. Don't Smart— 


“Billson yonder tells me he trusts Boothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Mw 


——— = | ak 
An Alternative i Look in pkgs. for the famous little! jand Plain Dealer, ‘his wife implicitly and absolutely, 
Passenger—Do I have to change, book, "The Road to Wellville.” os but—" | une ri Sewtw eninge 
cars in Chicago? Ever read the above letter? A new] The Colonel—Did your son play inj “Well?” ; 60c. Eye Book Free by Mall > 
Excessively Polite Conductor—Not; one appears ‘rom time to time. They |the varsity football match? “Well, Lnotice he carries his‘change ‘ Bo Teale Coad 07 All Broo thet } AG 
necessarily, madam, You can go back are genuine, true, and full of human| Mrs, M.—Indeed he did, Why, he was|and his fisthooks loose in the same RINE E ; REMEDY. rs eee Ware 
to New York if you want to.—Life, | interest. l the star drawback, London Opinion, | pocket.”—Judge i MURIN YE EDY CO., Chicag@ 


VHE REVIEW, CLARESHULM, ALBERIA. 


o, o, O. Oe Gam ©, OOo 
BoetoaoateeResteagedtortoctectoateate-tesgeageateate-cfeostectectoetedse-denegesteaceete-seet grace ace ogres 


a Ss 0 

$ s: 
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4 e 5 MY e % 
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* and Slaughter Prices. * 


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VOM OU PO PTO Ose NOU OU OU PU OUP OPO P NOU PUr COUP UOT OU OU OU ™, 


FREE WAR MAPS 


Every Reader of Claresholm Review 
May Have a War Map Free 


A Map 31-3 x 2 1-2 feet, showing clearly every boundary, every city, | 


every town, Village, hamlet and river in the whole European War area. Each 
map ina neat folder of convenient size. 

The Family Herald and Weekly Star of Montreal has secured ex :los 
ive rights for the War Map prepared by the celebrated firm of G. W. Bacon 
& Co, Ltd. of London, Kung, 
map printed, 


The Claresholm Review has completed arrangements by which our 
readers can secure a copy of this excellent map free of charge. 


Here is our Offer Good for 
30 Days Only 


The price of The Family Herald and Weekly Star, Canada’s Greatest 
Newspaper is one dollar a year, 

The price of The Claresholm Review is one dollar and half a year. 

We now offer both papers for one year each, including a copy of The 
Family Herald's War Map, size 3) x 40 inches, tu a neat folderof coivenient 
size for only $1.75, 

This offer applies to all subseribers, new or renewal, who pay for the 
two papers inside next 30 days from this date. 


ud War 


ow the war situation intelligently The Family Her 


Map is Hecessiury It should be in every Canadian Home. 


Order at Once at Claresholm Review 


“I bad my fortune told the other 
day,” said one woman. 

“What a waste of money!” said the 
other, 

“Not at all. I gave the woman 50 
cents, and she Informed me that ! am 
to inherit $100,000, Wasn't that a good 
bargain?”—Washington Star. 


Trace Marks 
Oesicns Considerate. 
“Mother, why do they play some of 
the music 30 low and some so innd?” 
“So that the peuple who are hurd of 


hearing can get their money's worth.” 


vone sending 

« re er an 

Y nble. Ce nien. 
ial. HANDROCK on Patents 

st avenes for ¥ batonts, 

recely¢ 


wal Fy i —Philadelphia Ledger, 
Scientific Fimerican, a 
A handsomely illustrated weekly, Largest clr. mplifying It. 
PANEER Brett yous pestage prepaid. sola by | — “T Understand Colonel Flushby gave 


a good account of himself in the war." 
“So he did and bna been giving a bet: 
ter oue ever since.”—Baltimore Sun. 


All newsdealers. 


LUNN & C0,28r2rosawer. Naw York | 


branch OMftce, ¢ = , Wasblogton, D.&, 


- 


oe 


O, Oe 6% 


Vo ete tes Oe Me Mao Oo 6%, 
ass WOUPU PU LU OV OU OU IU LUVIN OV OTS 


Two Old Customs. 

One of the oldest customs tn che 
| World, according to ap archaeologist, 
; OS MIVINE Precious metnis of other come 
Modities of ugteed value in exchange 
for the necessaries of iife. Of course, 
Hn equally aed custom ja promising 
to band over the preious metal or oth- 


et commodity nest week.—Louisville 
| Courter Journal. 
| A Zoological Question. 


The director of the zoological gardens 
Wis on bis Cacation. He received a 
bote from his chiet assistant, which 


| closed thus: “lhe chimpanzee seems 


tis beyond question the most comprehensive 


‘to be pimne tor a companion What 
shall we do until sou return?’—s8t 
Louls Republic. 

Olive Oil. 


Adulterated olive oi! is bard to de 
tert, even Dy Che expert tasters, hey 
‘ilege, however, that they can tell the 
spurious article by favor and effect 
on the throat 


“Does your husband go fishing?” 

"Yes," replied young Mrs, ‘Torkins, 
‘Haven't fish pecutine names? ‘The 
fast fishing trip Charley sat for three 
hours trying to cate a dush,’—Wasbe 
lagton Star, 


His witie's bills L saw him sean 
! Knew his heart must ache him, 
Hie said, "Clothes may not make the man 
But they can often break him." 
—Cincinnati Enquirer, 
Stella=1f hear you bad a terrible ex- 
perlence. Bella—Yes; | owas rescued 
from drowning by another gir! -Harte 
ford: Lites. 


When tovel 
Chere ll be 
She, who was i 
Will then be mere t 
—Priiadeiphia Ledger 
“John.” she comphiuned, "you used to 


say that you would always think of ine 
ns your litte girl.’ 

‘Well,’ he snuried, “I did 
ag you kept your weight under 
foupds.”—Chicago Record- Herald, 


us long 
170 


Witten sunlight lingers in the west 
And winds grow warm and hazy 
Sometimes you think you need a rest 

When you are merely lazy 
—Washington Star. 


Knicker — Something queer about 
Jones. 

Bocker—Yes; he is the only man who 
can't explain the bigh cost of living.- 
Judge. 


There was a young fellow named Syd, 
Who kissed a girl on the eye lyd. 
Said she to the lad: 
“Your aim's very bad, 
Tou should practice a vit,” so he dy@ 


FORTUNES IN SONGS. 


The Mocking Bird Made $3,000,000 
For Publishers, 
The death of ‘Stephen Adams,” in 


private life Michael Maybrick, com: ! 


poser uf such world-famous ballad 
songs as ‘‘A Warrior Bold,” ‘Nancy 
Lee,’’ “The Midshipmite,” “The sta, 
of Bethlehem,” ‘The Holy City,’ 
“They All Love Jack”’ and ‘Thora,’ 


reminds one that, unlike many othet | 


composers of popular songs, whe 
have usually sold their compositions 
Cutright instead of on the royalty 
basis, he must have made a good tuw 
from his music, 


It is true that he sold ‘A Warrion 


Bold” for a dollar, a song that pro 
duced royalties for its lucky purchas 


er that tun into four figures, and he 


also offered ‘‘Nancy Lee" to a pub 
lisher for $100, This, however, wat 
refused, but after hearing Stepher 
Adams sing it at St, James Hall the 
publisher offered $500. This time 
the composer refused, and the song 
which the publisher might have had 
for $100, ultimately cost him severa 
thousands in royalties, 

But ft is doubtful if Maybrick re. 


ceived as much for any of his songs : 


as the $200,000 which the universal: 
ly popular Queen of My Heart earned 
for its composer, Sir Arthur Sullivarc 
drew $50,000 in royalties from The 
Lost Chord,” while “In Old Madrid’ 
rewarded composer and publisher tc 
the tune of $75,000. “My Pretty 
Jane” is said to have yielded a reve: 
nue of 310,000 a line, and even afte) 
many years of popularity some old 
favorite songs are wort’ a substan: 
tial sum, for not long ago the copy: 
right of ‘‘For All Eternity’’ was sold 
for $11,000. 

“For All Eternity’? was refused by 
several publishers before a_ well: 
known firm agreed to undertake tc 
publish it, while all that the com 
poser of “Listen to the Mocking 
Bird,” by which the publishers are 
said to have realized $3,000,000, re 
ceived for the song was $35. 

“Alice, Where Art Thou?’’ was of 
fered to:severel. publishers for $25 
and declined with thanks, while 
“Kathleen Mavourneen” was actually 
parted with for this absurd sum. Whc 
can estimate the golden harvest that 
has been .reaped from these twe 
songs, which won wide popularity and 
undying fame? And the same might 
be said of Balfe’s exquisite “Come 
Into the Garden, Maud," sold by the 
composer for $500, and of “Chee 
Boys, Cheer,” sold by Henry Russel! 
for $15, - 


Grass, 

Scientists long have believed that 
the “grass’’ which was eaten by 
Nebuchadnezzar to cure the malady 
that for several years threatened o1 
obscured his reason was what mod. 
ern epicures esteem under the name 
of asparagus. Asparagus is appetiz- 
ing as well as otherwise suited tc 
the alimentary requirements of man 
There is a belief that the grains 
upon which, man leans as the staff of 
life originally were developed from 
grasses. Interesting speculation {fs 
indulged in as to whether, if meat 
should become unavailable, man 
could extract nourishment from the 
sources that suffice for the herbivor- 
ous creatures which find in grass 
their favorite diet. 


Unrenewable Patent, 


A lawyer who makes a specialty of 
Patent cases was once engaged in a 
case before a country justice. 

“Who are you anyway?” demanded 
the justice, 

“Well,” replied the lawyer, “I'm 
an attorney.” 

“P'raps you are, but J never heard 
one talk like you do. What kind of a 
one are you?” 

“I'm a patent attorney.” 

The magistrate rubbed his chin in 
thought. ‘‘Well, all I've got to say it,” 
he said slowly, ‘‘that when the pa- 
tent expires I dun't believe you can 
ever get it renewed again.” 


How Much He Thought About Her. 

They were on their way to the 
theatre, and she was tremendously 
happy. She felt that the words she 
longed to hear would be spoken that 
night, and the idea made her almost 
dizzy with delight, 

“Mr. Sampson,” she Baid scftly, 
“why do you wear that bit of string 
upon your finger?” 

“Oh,” replied Mr. Sampson, tak- 
ing it off, ‘that was to remind me of 
my engagement with you to-night.” 

It wasn’t much, but it was enough 
to take away the delightful dizziness. 
—London Chronicle, 


Balaam's Sword, 

“Here, sir,”’ said the antique deal- 
er, displaying a huge sword to a 
clerical-looking collector, ‘‘Ever see 
anything more interesting than that? 
That's Balaam's sword." 

“But, my good man, that cannot 
be,” said the dominie, ‘Balaam 
never had a sword, He only wished 
for one,” 

“Quite right, sir,’’ said the dealer, 


te 


“This is the one he wished for! 


Tt Does. 

An Irishman was asked how many 
legs a horse has. ‘Kight,’’ he re- 
plied; ‘one at each corner and two 
on each side,” 

“Don't you think that a foolish an- 
swer?” he was asked, 

The Irishman replied with wisdom 
when he said, “A fool question de- 
serves a fool answer.’’-—London An- 


swers, 


——SSE 
Pie Plates. 
The housekeeper who bakes pies 
and then puts them in rows on the 
shelf or in the pantry for future us 
should not use a tin p’e plate. No 
niatter how clean the plate has been 
scoured before using the tin will be 
likely to rust and there will be rust 
spots on the pie itself. Instead, use 
earthenware pile plates, 


Badly Named, 

There is a man in a midland town 
whose name is Burst. It is a mis- 
fortune that would not have attract- 
ed much attention if he had not call- 
ed his two children Anna May and 
Ernest Will.—London Mail, 


CALGARY, ALTA. — 


H A high class Residential and Day College for Boys and Young Men, 
| Girls and Young Women % 
| Opening of FALL TERM, TUESDAY. Sept. 9th, 1914. 
| BUSINESS CLASSES: Bovok-keeping, Stenography, Accountancy, Type- 
| writing, ete. 
| MUSE: Ful Concervatory course, Voeal, Instrumental and Theory. 
,; ACADEMIC: Public and High School Grades, Preparation for the Univer- 
sity and Teachers. Ladies College, course for Girls. French con- 
versation classes. 
‘FINE ART: China painting, Water Colors, Leather work, ete. 
EXPRESSION AND PHYSICAL CULTUKE: Dramatic 
Speaking. 
HOUSEHOLD SCIENCE. 
For full information and Calendar, apply to . 
Rev. George W, Kerby B. B,D. D. 
Principal. 


|IMOUNT ROYAL COLLEG® 


Art, Public 


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*% Ladies’, Gent’s and Children’s + 
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